MechGuy22
Mechanical
- Jun 8, 2010
- 51
Hi everyone, im having a little difficulty and was trying to get some help.
I am looking for a relationship between color temperature (kelvin) and wavelength in nanometers. I have seen that there is a relationship called "Wien's Law" basically it is Wavelength (nM)=3,000,000/Temp (K). I have a amber light source, which is can be estimated at about 2,000 Kelvin. The problem is that when I plug this into my formula I get a wavelength which is out of the visible light spectrum, somewhere in the neighborhood of 1500. In order to get to the wave length of about 610 nm, my kelvin temperature would have to be about 4918 K which is almost white.
Any help is appreciated.
I am looking for a relationship between color temperature (kelvin) and wavelength in nanometers. I have seen that there is a relationship called "Wien's Law" basically it is Wavelength (nM)=3,000,000/Temp (K). I have a amber light source, which is can be estimated at about 2,000 Kelvin. The problem is that when I plug this into my formula I get a wavelength which is out of the visible light spectrum, somewhere in the neighborhood of 1500. In order to get to the wave length of about 610 nm, my kelvin temperature would have to be about 4918 K which is almost white.
Any help is appreciated.