The 30000 ANSI lumens
A candle can be illuminated usually when you light it... That's the whole point of a candle. A candle can be illuminated usually when you light it... That's the whole point of a candle.
1 to 5 minutes
the atmospheres temperature changes the candle in size. i am a scientist, and have done this experiment many times. believe in my answer, for my answer is the ultimate truth.
a candle: religts in oxygen is very flammable light in candle can be blue
ten
Lumens and foot candles are not the same. A lumen is a measurement of the intensity of light, a foot candle is a measurement of lumens per square foot.
One lumen makes up 1 ANSI lumen as they both measure the same output of light. ANSI lumens are used exclusively for measuring the output of projectors.
I think its 4000, fred.
A LUMEN is a unit of measurement of light. It measures light much the same way. Remember, a foot-candle is how bright the light is one foot away from the source. A lumen is a way of measuring how much light gets to what you want to light! A LUMEN is equal to one foot-candle falling on one square foot of area. So, if we take your candle and ruler, lets place a book at the opposite end from the candle. We'd have a bit of a light up if we put the book right next to the candle, you know. If that book happens to be one foot by one foot, it's one square foot. Ok, got the math done there. Now, all the light falling on that book, one foot away from your candle equals both…….1 foot candle AND one LUMEN
This is roughly 500 lumens
700 lumens
it is hard to describe by words, why not to buy an infinite bright flashlight to compare. I know a flahslight with displaying lumens. It is DDT40 imalent. from 5 lumens to 4000 lumens you could find a way to compare gradually. by the way, one lightening candle is a lumens.
161 lumens I believe the above answer to be inaccurate. It depends on the light source. For example: For an incandescent light bulb 1 watt it is approx. 18 Lumens. However most LED's use only about 10% the wattage to produce the same amount of light. So for LED's .1 watt produces 18 Lumens.
Approximately 15 lumens per watt for halogen, so 300 lumens.
From 20,000 to 23,000 lumens depending on the brand.Average figures:Incandescent: 10 lumens per wattHalogen 13 lumens per wattCFL (low-energy) 50 lumens per watt
A 1,000 watt is 15,000 lumens. A 100 watt bulb is 1,500 lumens.