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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!decwrl!adobe!wtyler
- From: wtyler@adobe.com (William Tyler)
- Newsgroups: rec.photo
- Subject: Re: Degrees Kelvin
- Message-ID: <1992Nov24.015552.23516@adobe.com>
- Date: 24 Nov 92 01:55:52 GMT
- References: <1992Nov20.190250.3825@sci.ccny.cuny.edu> <1992Nov24.052440.1@cc.curtin.edu.au> <By6zKw.1KA@news.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Sender: Bill Tyler
- Followup-To: rec.photo
- Organization: Adobe Systems Inc., Mountain View, CA
- Lines: 26
-
- In article <By6zKw.1KA@news.cso.uiuc.edu> peltz@cerl.uiuc.edu (Steve Peltz) writes:
-
- >What is the basis for defining different light temperatures by degrees
- >Kelvin?
-
- Physicists, in analyzing the light emission of heated matter use an
- ideal source called a black body. For our purpose, you can approximate
- a black body by the filament in a light bulb, or by the glowing gasses
- of the Sun. Every black body emits light with a distribution of colors
- that depends solely on its temperature. For example, if you stick a
- piece of wire into a flame, you'll notice it start to glow red, then
- yellow, then white. You can't get it hot enough to glow blue without
- melting it first :-)
-
- The temperature of a light source is simply the temperature of a black
- body that would emit light with the same color distribution as the
- source. Light bulbs are good approximations to black bodies.
- Fluorescent tubes aren't, and that is why special wierd filtration is
- needed to color balance photos taken under fluorescent lighting.
-
- Bill
-
-
-
- --
- Bill Tyler wtyler@adobe.com
-