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The candela (symbol: cd, Latin for candle) is one of the seven SI base units. It is the luminous intensity, in a given direction, of a source that emits monochromatic radiation of frequency 540 × 1012 Hz and that has a radiant intensity in that direction of (1/683) W per steradian.

The frequency chosen is in the visible spectrum near green. The human eye is most sensitive to this frequency. At other frequencies, more radiant intensity is required to achieve the same luminous intensity, according to the frequency response of the human eye (called the V-lambda curve in the reference below).

Historically, the candela was a fundamental unit of the SI. It was defined in terms of the black-body radiation emitted by 1/60 of 1 cm2 of platinum at its melting point. The modern definition is no longer fundamental because it is based on another SI unit of powerMechanical power In physics, power (symbol: P is the amount of work W done per unit of time t''. This can be modeled as an energy flow, equivalent to the rate of change of the energy in a system, or the time rate of doing work, as defined by : where P is, the watt. Traces of its history remain, however. The arbitrary (1/683) term was chosen such that the new definition would exactly match the old definition.

1 SI light units

SI light units

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Quantity SI unit Symbol Notes
Luminous intensity candela cd
Luminous flux lumen or ( candela · steradian ) lm
Luminance candela / square metre cd/ m2
Illuminance lux or (lumen / square metre) lx
Luminous efficacy lumens per watt lm/ w

2 Reference

SI base units Units of luminous intensity



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