Spectrum 96: SW-T3 Edit
DeleteMeasurement
Brand |
other other |
---|---|
Lamp Product |
CIE standard illuminant F3 CIE standard illuminant F3 White Fluorescent 3450 K "standard" fluorescent lamp (two semi-broadband emissions of antimony and manganese activations in calcium halophosphate phosphor) |
Lamp ID |
SW-T3 (03/2010) |
Spectrometer | - |
Ballast | - no ballast or default/unknown ballast - |
Reflector | |
Distance | 0 cm |
Age | 0 hours |
Originator (measurement) | Publication |
Colorimetry
Colorimetry is the science to describe physically the human color perception. The wavelength range 380 nm - 780 nm is visible to humans and detected by three different photoreceptors. Many Reptiles see the range 350 nm - 800 nm and have an additional UV photoreceptor in their retina.
WARNING: The measurement range (350 - 800 nm) is not sufficient for this evaluation! Data is only available in the range 380 - 780 nm. Results are shown anyway but should be ignored by anyone except experts.
Whereas a spectrometer measures the intensity in every tiny wavelength interval resulting in thousands of individual intensities, the human eye only measures three intensities detected by the three cones. The same is true for the reptile eye with usually three or four photoreceptors. Effectively the detailled spectrum displayed above reduces to a much compacter bar graph displayed below. The photoreceptor sensitivites from these L-Cone, M-Cone, S-Cone, and U-Cone are used, they are chosen as an average of measured reptile photoreceptor sensitivity curves. The bar graph also shows as reference the intensity seen by the three or four photoreceptors for average sunlight (id 1).
From these three numbers the colour coordinate and the correlated colour temperature for humans are calculated using the CIE standard method. I adapted this concept to a "3 cone reptile (M,S,U)" and a "4 cone reptile (L,M,S,U)". I am sure, that this adaption to other colour spaces makes sense mathematically and this is also done in scientific research regarding colour vision of animals, however I have not seen calculation of colour temperatures for other animals in the scientific literature. Even if it is hypothetical, at least this shows, how arbitrary the colour temperature is, and that the colour temperature calculated for humans does not apply to reptiles. The colour spaces also show the colour coordinates of different phases of daylight ((ids 1, 338 – 451, 511 – 513 ), indicated by crosses, coloured in the appriximate colour perceived by a human.
Human (CIE) | 3 cone reptile | 4 cone reptile | |
---|---|---|---|
Cone Excitation | |||
Colour Coordinate | ( 0.41 ; 0.39 ) | ( 0.4 ; 0.47 ) | ( 0.49 ; 0.21 ; 0.24 ) |
CCT | 3400 Kelvin | 5000 Kelvin | 3000 Kelvin |
distance | 0.13 | 0.12 | |
colour space | 3-D-graph not implemented yet |
Vitamin D3 Analysis
Vitamin D3 is produced by UVB radiation around 300 nm. 7DHC/ProD3 present in the skin is converted to PreD3 when absorbing an UV photon. PreD3 can be converted back to ProD3, to Lumisterol, or to Tachysterol when absorbing another UV photon or can be converted to Vitamin D3 in a warm environment.
This process prevents any overdose of vitamin D3 from UV radiation with a spectrum similar to sunlight. As a comparison the solar spectra at 20°(id:14) and at 85°(id:21) solar angle are shown.
The ratio of the two solarmeters 6.2 (UVB) and 6.5 (UV index) readings has proven a useful and very simply number to acess the spectral shape in the vitamin-d3-active region.
Effective Irradiances
Effective irradiances are calculated for all ranges, actionspectra and radiometers currently present in this database.
The calculation method is a numerical implementation (Simpson's rule) of the formula
To learn more about calculating effective irradiances and radiometers I recommend this excellent report on UVB meters: Characterizing the Performance of Integral Measuring UV-Meters (pdf).
The numbers in the following tables can also be used to estimate certain (effective) irradiances from radiomer readings. Example: If the database lists
- range: UVB (US) = 13.8 µW/cm²
- radiometer: Solarmeter 6.2 = 19.6 µW/cm²
total ( 0 nm - 0 nm) 2780 µW/cm² = 27.8 W/m² UVC ( 0 nm - 280 nm) 0 µW/cm² = 0 W/m² non-terrestrial ( 0 nm - 290 nm) 0 µW/cm² = 0 W/m² total2 ( 250 nm - 880 nm) 2780 µW/cm² = 27.8 W/m² UVB (EU) ( 280 nm - 315 nm) 0 µW/cm² = 0 W/m² UVB (US) ( 280 nm - 320 nm) 0 µW/cm² = 0 W/m² UVA+B ( 280 nm - 380 nm) 0 µW/cm² = 0 W/m² Solar UVB ( 290 nm - 315 nm) 0 µW/cm² = 0 W/m² UVA D3 regulating ( 315 nm - 335 nm) 0 µW/cm² = 0 W/m² UVA (EU) ( 315 nm - 380 nm) 0 µW/cm² = 0 W/m² UVA2 (medical definition) ( 320 nm - 340 nm) 0 µW/cm² = 0 W/m² UVA (US) ( 320 nm - 380 nm) 0 µW/cm² = 0 W/m² UVA1 (variant) ( 335 nm - 380 nm) 0 µW/cm² = 0 W/m² UVA1 (medical) ( 340 nm - 400 nm) 26.7 µW/cm² = 0.267 W/m² vis. UVA ( 350 nm - 380 nm) 0 µW/cm² = 0 W/m² VIS Rep3 ( 350 nm - 600 nm) 2040 µW/cm² = 20.4 W/m² VIS Rep4 ( 350 nm - 700 nm) 2740 µW/cm² = 27.4 W/m² purple ( 380 nm - 420 nm) 138 µW/cm² = 1.38 W/m² VIS ( 380 nm - 780 nm) 2780 µW/cm² = 27.8 W/m² VIS2 ( 400 nm - 680 nm) 2690 µW/cm² = 26.9 W/m² PAR ( 400 nm - 700 nm) 2720 µW/cm² = 27.2 W/m² tmp ( 400 nm - 1100 nm) 2760 µW/cm² = 27.6 W/m² blue ( 420 nm - 490 nm) 464 µW/cm² = 4.64 W/m² green ( 490 nm - 575 nm) 898 µW/cm² = 8.98 W/m² yellow ( 575 nm - 585 nm) 237 µW/cm² = 2.37 W/m² orange ( 585 nm - 650 nm) 870 µW/cm² = 8.7 W/m² red ( 650 nm - 780 nm) 172 µW/cm² = 1.72 W/m² IRA ( 700 nm - 1400 nm) 41 µW/cm² = 0.41 W/m² IR2 ( 720 nm - 1100 nm) 24.2 µW/cm² = 0.242 W/m² IRB ( 1400 nm - 3000 nm) 0 µW/cm² = 0 W/m²
Erythema 0.00126 UV-Index Pyrimidine dimerization of DNA 0 µW/cm² Photoceratitis 0 µW/cm² Photoconjunctivitis 0 µW/cm² DNA Damage 0 Vitamin D3 0 µW/cm² Photosynthesis 1720 µW/cm² Luminosity 10500 lx Human L-Cone 1620 µW/cm² Human M-Cone 1190 µW/cm² Human S-Cone 398 µW/cm² CIE X 1520 µW/cm² CIE Y 1460 µW/cm² CIE Z 731 µW/cm² PAR 13100000 mol photons Extinction preD3 0 e-3*m²/mol Extinction Tachysterol 0 e-3*m²/mol Exctincition PreD3 0 m²/mol Extinction Lumisterol 0 m²/mol Exctincition Tachysterol 0 m²/mol Extinction 7DHC 0 m²/mol L-Cone 1460 µW/cm² M-Cone 610 µW/cm² S-Cone 710 µW/cm² U-Cone 188 µW/cm² UVR - ICNIRP 2004 0.00081 Rel Biol Eff Melatonin Supression 543 µW/cm² Blue Light Hazard 450 µW/cm² (42.9 µW/cm² per 1000 lx) CIE 174:2006 PreVit D3 0 µW/cm² Lumen Reptil 7730 "pseudo-lx" Vitamin D3 Degradation 0 µW/cm² Actinic UV 0.00081 µW/cm² (0.000774 mW/klm) Exctincition Lumisterol 0 m²/mol Exctincition 7DHC 0 m²/mol Exctincition Toxisterols 0 m²/mol
Solarmeter 6.2 (UVB, pre 2010) 0.0653 µW/cm² Solarmeter 6.5 (UV-Index, pre 2010) 0.000217 Leybold UVB 0 µW/cm² Leybold UVA 2.9 µW/cm² Leybold UVC 0 µW/cm² DeltaOhm UVB 0 µW/cm² DeltaOhm UVC 0 µW/cm² Vernier UVB 0 µW/cm² Vernier UVA 0.565 µW/cm² Gröbel UVA 1.25 µW/cm² Gröbel UVB 0 µW/cm² Gröbel UVC 0 µW/cm² Luxmeter 10700 lx Solarmeter 6.4 (D3) 0.000677 IU/min UVX-31 0 µW/cm² IL UVB 0 µW/cm² IL UVA 2.82 µW/cm² Solarmeter 6.5 (UVI, post 2010) 0 UV-Index Solarmeter 6.2 (UVB, post 2010) 0.000763 µW/cm² (Solarmeter Ratio = NAN) Solarmeter AlGaN 6.5 UVI sensor 0.00196 UV Index GenUV 7.1 UV-Index 0.00287 UV-Index Solarmeter 10.0 (Global Power) (manuf.) 30.3 W/m² Solarmeter 4.0 (UVA) 0.322 mW/cm² LS122 (manuf.) 0 W/m² ISM400 (first guess) 21.7 W/m² LS122 (assumption) 1.27 W/m² ISM400_new 17.5 W/m² Solarmeter 10.0 (Global Power) (assumption) 30 W/m²