1 lx = 1 lm/m2 = 1 cd·m2·m–4
Lux is a derived unit based on lumen, and lumen is a derived unit based on candela.
One lux is equal to one lumen per square metre, where 4π lumens is the total luminous flux of a light source of one candela of luminous intensity.
| Illuminance | Abbr. | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 0.00005 lux | 50 µlx | Starlight |
| 1 lux | Moonlight | |
| 10 lux | Candle one foot away | |
| 400 lux | A brightly lit office | |
| 400 lux | Sunrise or sunset on a clear day. | |
| 1000 lux | 1 klx | Typical TV studio lighting |
| 1000 lux | 1 klx | Level capable of producing small shifts in the human biological clock |
| 10000 lux | 10 klx | Level capable of resynchronizing the human biological clock to a new schedule |
| 32000 lux | 32 klx | Sunlight on an average day (min.) |
| 100000 lux | 100 klx | Sunlight on an average day (max.) |
Trivia: Unicode has a symbol for "lx": (㏓), but this is just a legacy code to accommodate old code pages in certain Asian languages, and it is not recommended for use in any language today.
Achieving an illuminance of 500 lux might be possible in a home kitchen with a single fluorescent light fixture with an output of 12000 lumens. To light a factory floor with dozens of times the area of the kitchen would require dozens of such fixtures. Thus, lighting a larger area to the same level of lux requires a greater number of lumens.
The name "footcandle" conveys "the illuminance cast on a surface by a one-candela source one foot away." As natural as this sounds, this style of name is now frowned upon, because the dimensional formula for the unit is not foot · candela, but candela/ft2. Some sources do however note that the "lux" can be thought of as a "meter-candle" (i.e. the illuminance cast on a surface by a one-candela source one meter away). A source that is farther away casts less illumination than one that is close, so one lux is less illuminance than one footcandle. Since illuminance follows the inverse-square law, and since one meter = 3.281 feet, one lux = 1/3.282 footcandle = 1/10.76 footcandle.
In practical applications, as when measuring room illumination, it is very difficult to measure illuminance more accurately than ±10%, and for many purposes it is quite sufficient to think of one footcandle as about ten lux.
The lux is one lumen/meter2, and accordingly the corresponding radiometric unit, which has no special name, is the watt/meter2. There is no single conversion factor between lux and watt/meter2; there is a different conversion factor for every wavelength, and it is not possible to make a conversion unless one knows the spectral composition of the light.
At a monochromatic light wavelength of 555 nm, the green-colored wavelength to which the eye is most sensitive, the power needed to make one lumen is minimum, at 1.464 mW/m²; that is, the peak of the luminosity function is 683.002 lumens per watt. This means that for green light of this particular wavelength, one lumen = 1/683 watt. The luminosity function falls to zero in the infrared and ultraviolet wavelengths.
For a light source with mixed wavelengths, the number of lumens per watt can be calculated by means of the luminosity function. In order to appear reasonably "white," a light source cannot consist solely of the green light to which the eye is most sensitive, but must include a generous mixture of red and blue wavelengths to which it is much less sensitive.
This means that typical white (or whitish) light sources produce far fewer lumens per watt than the theoretical maximum of 683 lumens per watt. The ratio between the actual number of lumens per watt and the theoretical maximum is expressed as a percentage known as the luminous efficiency. For example, a typical incandescent light bulb has a luminous efficiency of only about 2%.
In reality, individual eyes vary in their luminosity functions. However, photometric units are precisely defined and precisely measurable. They are based on an agreed-upon standard luminosity function which is in fact based on the measurement of eyes and is reasonably close to the sensitivity curve for most eyes.
SI derived units | Units of illuminance | Photometry
Лукс | Lux | Lux (světlo) | Lux | Lux (Einheit) | Lux | Lux (unité) | Lux | Lux | לוקס | Lux (natuurkunde) | ルクス | Lux | Lux | Luks | Lux | Люкс | Lux (jednotka) | Лукс | Luksi | Lux | Lux