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Nook’s Tidbits: Inverse Square Law for Lighting

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When a beam of light leaves a spotlight, the area illuminated by the beam increases as it goes further away from the spotlight. The same quantity of light must illuminate larger areas. If the distance from the light source to the surface (otherwise known as the “throw distance”) is doubled, the intensity drops to ¼ of the original. This happens because the illuminated surface is now four times bigger.
—Nook Schoenfeld