Lighting Glossary

What is Candela? Luminous Intensity in Directional Lighting

Candela (cd) measures luminous intensity — the amount of light emitted in a particular direction. Critical for spotlights, track lights, and floodlights where beam direction matters.

Definition

Candela (symbol: cd) is the SI base unit of luminous intensity — the amount of light emitted by a source in a particular direction per unit solid angle. One candela is approximately the light output of a single candle (hence the name). Unlike lumens (total light output in all directions) and lux (light falling on a surface), candela measures directional intensity — critical for spotlights, track lights, floodlights, and any application where beam direction and peak intensity matter. In lighting design, candela values from IES photometric files drive all illuminance (lux) calculations in software like DIALux and AGi32. The relationship: 1 cd = 1 lm/sr (lumen per steradian of solid angle).

Key Data

ParameterValue / Explanation
Typical candle flame~1 cd (the historical reference point for the unit)
LED MR16 spotlight (25°)1,000-3,000 cd center beam
LED track spot (15° narrow)5,000-15,000 cd — tight beam, high center intensity
LED floodlight (wide 60°)2,000-8,000 cd — spread intensity over wider area
Airport runway light20,000-50,000 cd — extreme directional intensity for visibility at distance
Center Beam Candlepower (CBCP)Industry term — candela measured at the center (maximum intensity point) of the beam

Application Guide

Jewelry display spotlight

5,000-8,000 cd, 10-15° beam, CRI 95+

High center intensity makes diamonds sparkle; tight beam focuses attention

Cathedral / high ceiling

15,000-25,000 cd, 8-12° beam, high-power LED

Extreme mounting height requires high candela to deliver adequate lux at floor level

Outdoor area flood

3,000-8,000 cd, 60-120° beam, wide distribution

Spread light across large area; candela traded for coverage

Conclusion & Procurement Recommendation

For B2B procurement of directional luminaires: always request the IES photometric file showing the complete candela distribution table (Type C photometry: 0-180° vertical, 0-360° horizontal). The candela table enables accurate illuminance calculations in lighting design software. Key specifications: (1) Center Beam Candlepower (CBCP) — peak intensity at beam center, (2) Beam angle — angle where intensity drops to 50% of CBCP, (3) Field angle — angle where intensity drops to 10% of CBCP. For accent/display lighting, specify CBCP and beam angle rather than lumens — two 1,000-lumen spotlights can have vastly different visual impact depending on beam concentration.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do candela, lumen, and lux relate?
Lumen = total light output in all directions (like water flow from a shower head). Candela = light intensity in a specific direction (like a jet nozzle focusing water). Lux = light density on a surface at a specific distance (like how wet the target gets). A 1,000-lumen spotlight with 15° beam concentrates its output into a narrow cone, achieving high candela (~8,000 cd) and delivering high lux on a small area. The same 1,000 lumens in a 120° wide flood achieves low candela (~300 cd) and delivers modest lux over a large area. The total lumens are identical — the optics determine the candela distribution.
When should I specify candela instead of lumens?
Specify candela (and beam angle) for directional applications: spotlights, track lights, accent lighting, floodlights, and any fixture where the beam distribution pattern matters. Specify lumens for non-directional applications: panels, strips, bulbs, high bays (which use reflectors but are typically specified by total output). For accent/display lighting, the rule of thumb: desired illuminance (lux) at target × distance² (m) = required CBCP (cd). For 1,000 lux on artwork at 3m distance: 1,000 × 3² = 9,000 cd required.

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