I don't believe that there is such a thing as an 'ampere per lumen'. An ampere is the SI unit of current, whereas the lumen is the SI photometric unit for luminous flux. There is no direct relationship between the two.
1 lumen = 1 candela per steradian.1 candela = 1/683 watts per steradians (assuming 540nm light wavelength).Assuming that the light is collected from a single steradian:1 Lumen = 1 Candela -> = 1/683 Watt -> Watt = 683 Lumens1 Joule = 1 Watt per Second -> Watt = Joule/SecondHence:683 Lumen = 1 Joule/SecondUnder the above assumptions1 Lumen = 1/683 Joule/Second
This question is ill posed. Lumen is a unit of measure for how much light comes from the lamp Watt is a unit of measure for how much energy is used by the lamp If the question were; "Which is brighter, a 2000 lumen bulb or a 1500 lumen bulb?" then the answer would be: The 2000 lumen bulb. I think the relation ship between lumen and watt is something like: Incandecent bulbs are 15w/lumen Flourecent bulbs use 40w/lumen LED bulbs are 70w/lumen The way to show the watt and lumen relationship is usually lumens (amount of light) per watt (energy consumption). This is like gas in your car (Miles or KM per Gallon or Liter). Incandescent bulbs have a maximum luminosity of 52 lumens/watt. Fluorescent bulbs range from 46 lumens/watt (CFL) to 100 lumens/watt (T5 and T8 tubes) LED bulbs range from 29 lumens/watt (older, low efficiency) to 100+ (XCree) and they are getting better.
A 200 ampere service provides 200 amperes per leg
Neither amperes nor volts is the same as watts (power), so the question "what is the higher power" does not make sense.Amperes is electrical current flow, in coulombs per second.Volts is electrical potential, in joules per coulomb.Watts is electrical power, in joules per second, which is also amperes times volts.
because lumen carries biochemical processes for the cells.
There are 1000 milliwatts per lumen.
It stands for light of christ.
Current is measured in amperes. Amperes is also coulombs per second.
there is 5 lumen per hour in 1 joule
RKVAH stands for Rated Kilo Volt Amperes per Hour. It basically refers to the reactive power and is commonly seen in industrial energy meters.
If you refer to the energy cost, that doesn't make sense. Lumen means how bright something is - the actual cost will depend on how long you keep a bulb on; in other words, you would get dollars per kilo-lumen per hour, for example - not just dollars per kilo-lumen.
The relationship between amperes, volts, and watts is... watts = amperes * volts Confirming by looking at the fundamental units involved... watts (joules per second) = amperes (coulombs per second) * volts (joules per coulomb)
The relationship between amperes, volts, and watts is... watts = amperes * volts Confirming by looking at the fundamental units involved... watts (joules per second) = amperes (coulombs per second) * volts (joules per coulomb)
One lux = one lumen per square metre See link for more detail.
around 20
1 lumen = 1 candela per steradian.1 candela = 1/683 watts per steradians (assuming 540nm light wavelength).Assuming that the light is collected from a single steradian:1 Lumen = 1 Candela -> = 1/683 Watt -> Watt = 683 Lumens1 Joule = 1 Watt per Second -> Watt = Joule/SecondHence:683 Lumen = 1 Joule/SecondUnder the above assumptions1 Lumen = 1/683 Joule/Second
Power=Volts x Amps Unit for power is watts