NOTICE
This method has been found to be incorrect, thanks to the tests of another forum member as well as my own. Please see these posts for more information:
https://budgetlightforum.com/t/-/43158/35
https://budgetlightforum.com/t/-/43158/39
NOTICE
So I found a pretty old post on the other flashlight forum about why just taking a random lux measurement and then calculating it back to 1m is wrong.
I did some research, and yes, it makes sense both mathematically and in practice.
Before doing all this math, I wanted to see for myself irl, so I took my tiny P5r.2 aspheric flashlight and put it horizontally.
I was very careful to get all the measurements right, and the peak lux in the hotspot:
At 1.00m I measured 12000 lux (12000 cd).
At 2.00m I measured 4500 lux. Now logically, based on 1/r^2, you can calculate this back to 1m by 4500*(2^2)/(1^2) and you get..........18000 LUX???
YES that is correct! The farther you measure lux from, the higher the cd value you get!
At 2m shouldn't it have been 3000 lux? Let's see why not:
So now, let me explain why almost every lux/cd/candlepower you have ever seen is (somewhat) wrong:
First of all, there is this scary-sounding thing called etendue: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etendue
It seems complicated, but the main thing you need to know is just the inverse law of light:
Pretty simple right? 2x distance, 1/4 lux.
Now, the reason for this is because light is emitted in a 360 degree sphere. Taking a look at a slice of a sphere, you see this:
Looking good?
Well here comes trippy part:
The head of a flashlight is NOT a point. The beams coming out of (most) flashlights is NOT spreading out by 1/r^2 (the spill is, but the beam is not)
Imagine a perfect thrower, perfectly collimated light ways, with 0 degrees divergence. The head of the light is 100mm, the spot at any distance is 100mm.
Ignoring the resistance of air in the way, the lux at 1m would be exactly the same as the lux at 10m, or 100m, because the spot is not increasing in size. All photons at 1m are the same as the number of photons at 100m.
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Now imagine a flashlight like aspheric or large reflector throwers, which are CLOSE to collimated:
As you can see, the light coming out of a flashlight is actually a SECTION of the inverse square light law, a section that does not begin at r=0.
This means that the light is diverging LESS than if the flashlight was the source. How much less will depend on how well your flashlight collimates the light.
This is easy to calculate by just measuring how wide the beam is at the head of your flashlight, and how wide the spot is at a distance.
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Fortunately, there is another really smart person who made a web calculator for this: http://nightsword.com/uniformbeamcalc/
But at first I didn't trust it, so here is some math to check:
Say we have a flashlight with a 100mm lens, and the full lens is being used, so there is a 100mm diameter beam coming out of the flashlight.
The beam is fairly collimated by the lens, and I measure a 300mm spot at 10m distance, with 50000 lux.
The point of the triangle is behind the light by some distance we do not know, so we find it using some simple trig that you probably learnt about in high school:
Except we know the tree is 300mm tall and the person is 100mm tall, and the ditance between the tree and the person is 10m.
(you might be thinking I should have used 150mm and 50mm, but the truth is the ratio between 300 and 100 is the same as the ratio of 150 to 50, and only the ratio matters!)
so 300/100 = (10+x)/x where x is the distance behind the light
3x = 10+x
2x = 10
x = 5
The light rays converge to a point 5m behind the light, and the 10m you measured at is actually 15m from the origin.
NOW we take the 50000 lux (50k lux) we measured and apply the inverse law of light,
(lux @ 1m) / (50000) = (15m)^2 / (1m)^2
lux @ 1m = 225 / 1 * 50000
lux @ 1m = 11 250 000 lux = 11.25M lux = 11.25M cd = 11.25M candlepower
Since some american made that calculator, we are inconvenienced and need to use google to convert m to feet and mm to inches....
BUT IT WORKS!
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Why you might not want to care:
-lights with a small head diameter have pretty large beam divergence, just look at any reflector EDC flashlight, which means the convergence point behind the flashlight is not that far behind, so lux measurements are fairly accurate.
-the farther the lux is measured at the more accurate it is (basic trig, imagine the triangle above, the ratio of measurement distance/total distance gets closer to 1), so it's not like you're actually getting less lux from your light, the rating on the light is an underestimate
-maybe you don't care about lux/cd throw at all :P
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Why I care:
-I have been underestimating my lux output of my aspheric throwers. I need to go outside and measure the spot size at about 50-100m distance, then properly calculate the candlepower/cd/lux.
-measuring indoors is not very accurate because of the way lenses work, you can end up with incorrect values due to the rays crossing over eachother if not focused correctly, which is why accurate results should use a measurement of "a few hundred feet" as it says on the website :)
-I hope you learnt something, I certainly did, and I'm looking forward to finding out the real values of my flashlight.