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.
the lumen is bright
BRIGHT!
The energy consumption of a modern Cree XP-G or XM-L based flashlight with 170 lumen output can be as low as 1.4 watts with 120 and more lumen per watt. The light output will be approximately equal to a 20 W tungsten incandescent light bulb or a 10 W halogen light.
a measurement of the amount of visible light.AnswerA lumen is the photometric SI unit for luminous flux -i.e. the rate at which an object emits visible light. By 'visible light', we mean electromagnetic energy perceived by the human eye, and the lumen is based on the frequency of green light, to which the human eye is most sensitive.
An output of 11 lumens is relatively low for a flashlight, making it suitable for close-up tasks or as a reading light in a dark environment. However, it may not provide sufficient brightness for outdoor activities or situations requiring significant illumination, such as navigating in the dark or signaling. For general use, a flashlight with at least 100 lumens is typically recommended.
Lumen and candlepower are not the same thing. Lumen measure the of light surrounds, like you would light a room with a lamp. Candlepower measures the light in a beam, like a flashlight beam. With a few assumptions you can convert lumen to candlepower. With these assumptions 360 lumen would be 28.6 candlepower.
no, but it does have a very bright screen
Coleman CT50 500 Lumen LED Flashlight (CLMN CT 500L on receipt)
So they don't need a flashlight at night!
The brightness of 700 lumens can be found in a handheld LED flashlight. The amount of light given off by 700 lumens is enough to brighten any path in front of you. 700 lumens would also be adequate for lighting a small room like a small bedroom.
Answers:it shines very bright in the night especially
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.