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  2. Metal-halide lamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metal-halide_lamp

    Metal halide lamp bulb ... where they are commonly generically known as MSD or HMI lamps and are generally used in 150, 250, 400, 575 and 1,200 watt ratings, ...

  3. Hydrargyrum quartz iodide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrargyrum_quartz_iodide

    Hydrargyrum quartz iodide (HQI) is a trademark name of Osram's brand of metal halide lamps [1] made for general floodlighting, arena floodlighting, shop and commercial and industrial lighting. Hydrargyrum is the Latin name for the element mercury. When heated, mercury vapour is created inside the lamp, and deposited when it cools.

  4. Hydrargyrum medium-arc iodide lamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrargyrum_medium-arc...

    The efficiency advantage is near fourfold, with approximately 85–108 lumens per watt of electricity. Unlike regular incandescent halogen lamps where a halide gas is used to regenerate the filament and keep the evaporated tungsten from darkening the glass, the mercury vapour and the metal halides in HMI lamps are what emit the light.

  5. Luminous flux - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luminous_flux

    100 40 W incandescent lamp at 230 volts: 325 7 W high-output white LED: 450 6 W COB filament LED lamp: 600 18 W fluorescent lamp: 1250 100 W incandescent lamp: 1750 40 W fluorescent lamp: 2800 35 W xenon bulb: 2200–3200 100 W fluorescent lamp: 8000 127 W low pressure sodium vapor lamp: 25,000 400 W metal-halide lamp: 40,000

  6. Luminous efficacy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luminous_efficacy

    Sources that depend on thermal emission from a solid filament, such as incandescent light bulbs, tend to have low overall efficacy because, as explained by Donald L. Klipstein, "An ideal thermal radiator produces visible light most efficiently at temperatures around 6300 °C (6600 K or 11,500 °F). Even at this high temperature, a lot of the ...

  7. Tanning lamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanning_lamp

    High-pressure bulbs are 3 to 5 inches long and typically powered by a ballast with 250 to 2,000 watts. The most common is the 400 watt variety that is used as an added face tanner in the traditional tanning bed. High-pressure lamps use quartz glass, and as such do not filter UVC.