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Volume 8 Issue 1
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October 2004
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IntroductionThe phrase, "Color is only a pigment of your imagination" (Ingling, circa 1977), is a humorous and convenient way to remember that color is not a physical property of objects, but rather a human physiological and psychological response to light. Out of the lighting industry's need to quantify color properties, lighting scientists have developed methods that allow us to approximate color perceptions. A host of measurements are now available to describe such factors as the color appearance of light sources and objects, the ability of a light source to render colors accurately, and the stability of color properties over a lamp's lifetime. However, due to the complexity of the visual system, these measures are only approximations, and their usefulness is limited. In order to provide information useful for specifying electric light sources properly, Lighting Answers: Light Sources and Color describes many of the methods for characterizing the color properties of light sources. It also addresses these methods' strengths and weaknesses. Part I of this report focuses on the metrics used to describe the appearance of light emitted from a light source. To provide a technical background, it also describes the human color vision system. Part II focuses on the color appearance of objects when illuminated by a light source. It proposes a "triangulation" method for describing color rendering to aid in the selection of light sources based on their ability to show object colors. This section also discusses the relationship between color rendering and luminous efficacy (lumens per watt). Although older light source technologies forced a trade-off between the two, many products now available can provide both good color properties and high efficacy.
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