80T
(80T)
9
I think I've figured it..
So, the slides were indeed informative, but from my understanding they didn't really made complete sense. Now I think i got what I was missing.. Basically, it would've been helpful if in those graphs there would've been one more ray represented from the emitter point closest to the reflector - that would've made for one, the biggest difference in incident angle, basically reflecting outside the perpendicular angle, pretty much in the other direction than the incident angles (thus falling under the corona surface area, outside of the hot-spot area) that are already represented in those slides and second, without representing what happens to the rays while reflecting from both diametrically opposed points on the walls of the reflector, you'd never notice that the corona comes from the center towards the reflector side of the emitter's surface area that at more than the intended beam angle only gets reflected not only by one side of the reflector, but also by less and less of the reflector's surface area of that particular side, thus, the progressively reduced brightness, hence the corona.
Hopefully it makes sense.. At least this is what I think I observed by looking at those slides and also confirmed by simply looking down a reflector and tilting it at different angles. It all clicked more or less in place.
EDIT: Also.. figured out that the focal distance that I was blabbering about in a previews post it's only a side effect of the incident angles given by the emitter being a plane, instead of a dot, not the actual reflector's calculated, intended focal distance.. that being only for the ideal dot emitter. This brings me to another point.. disregarding the real life applications imperfections, the focal distance which the reflector curve is calculated is actually tending towards infinity for the given ideal dot emitter..