chrisewolf Posted April 24, 2013 Share Posted April 24, 2013 Hey guys, I am (again) a bit confused about a topic in photometry and I hope someone can help me out! I am taking measurements under certain angles to the surface normal of an LED and measure the Luminance L(cd/m^2)=(lm/m^2/sr). To obtain the illuminance I have to integrate over the solid angle. I know from the detector that the measurement angle is 0.2 degrees. The luminance does not change over azimuth so I integrated that out right away and I centered the azimuth at x. lets say I took a measurement under an angle to the surface normal of 50 degrees and I measured L=150 cd/m^2 can someone check the attached calculation and comment if that is right? Thank you very much in advance Cheers, Chris Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alper Ülkü Posted February 8, 2015 Share Posted February 8, 2015 To me it does not seem correct. I think you got the solid angle wrong. 0.2 steradian solid angle defines a detector with apex angle 14.5 degrees, quite uncommon. Illuminance = Omega. Luminance . cos (theta) If Omega as you say is 0.2 then Ev = 0.2 * Lv * cos (theta) = 19.28 lm / m2 (Ev/Lv factor is not 2/25:0.08 but is 0.1285) If 0.2 degree is the angle subtended by the detector which is generally the case; then Omega becomes = 2pi (1 - cos 0.2/2) = 9.5e-6 sr, Ev = 150 x 9.5e-6 x cos (50) = 9.16e-4 lm/m2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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