powerlightness
Powerlightness is a term used in some design, engineering, and perception literature to describe the relationship between the power delivered to a light source and the perceived lightness or brightness of the light emitted or reflected in a scene. It is not a standardized concept; its exact definition varies by discipline and context.
In lighting engineering, powerlightness refers to models and measurements that predict how changes in electrical power
In computer graphics and display technology, powerlightness describes perceptual mappings from device luminance to image lightness,
Theoretical foundations draw on psychophysics, including Stevens' power law and Weber–Fechner law, which describe nonlinear relationships
Applications often focus on energy-efficient lighting design, display calibration, and perceptual optimization of imaging systems. The