home
|
about us
|
newsroom
|
publications
|
search:
LRC Programs
Daylight Dividends
DELTA
DesignWorks
Energy Efficiency
Light & Health
Lighting Metrics
NLPIP
Partners
PEARL
Solid-State
Transportation
Research Areas
Applications & Design
Automotive & Street Lighting
Aviation Lighting
Controls
Daylighting
Energy & Environment
Health & Vision
LEDs
Outdoor Lighting
Product Testing
Residential Lighting
Security Lighting
Technologies
Technology Transfer
Educational Opportunities
Graduate Education
Life Sciences in Lighting
Outreach Education
search
NLPIP Home
Technologies
Publications
About the Program
FAQs
NLPIP Search
Glossary
Sitemap
Registration
New users
Returning users
Unregister
Sponsors:
<< Previous page
Full-Spectrum Light Sources
Title:
Full-Spectrum Light Sources
Date:
2003
Last updated:
March 2005
Author(s):
Mark Rea, Lei Deng, Robert Wolsey
Number of Pages:
17
Download printable PDF
Online Version
Abstract
Manufacturers of full-spectrum light sources have claimed a variety of benefits for their products, including better visibility, improved color rendering, better health, and greater productivity. Light sources promoted as full-spectrum can cost over ten times as much as nearly identical products that do not bear the full-spectrum claim. This report addresses questions about full-spectrum light sources: What are full-spectrum light sources? How valid are the claimed benefits? Are these products worth the extra cost? This report also proposes a convenient definition for full-spectrum light sources that can be used to quantify the extent to which a given light source deviates from a full-spectrum light source. In March 2005, NLPIP revised the report to present an improved calculation method for this new full-spectrum metric.