Inverse Square Law

Light spreads as it travels, so illuminance falls off with the square of the distance from the source. Double the distance and the light drops to a quarter.

E = I ÷ d²

What the terms mean

Symbol Meaning
E Illuminance, in lux
I Luminous intensity, in candela (cd)
d Distance, in meters

Worked example

A 1,000 cd source gives 1,000 ÷ 2² = 250 lux at 2 m, but only 1,000 ÷ 4² = 62.5 lux at 4 m.

Why aiming matters. Because the falloff is squared, small increases in mounting height or distance cut light levels sharply. This drives fixture spacing and pole-height decisions.

See the Luminous Intensity Formula and Lux at Distance Calculator.

The inverse-square law in lighting

Light spreads as it travels, so illuminance falls off with the square of the distance from the source: lux = candela ÷ distance². Double the distance and the light landing on a surface drops to a quarter, not a half; triple it and it’s a ninth. This is why a fixture that’s plenty bright up close can be inadequate just a few metres farther away.

The law applies cleanly to point-like sources (spots, downlights) measured on-axis. For large area sources or very close distances the falloff is gentler, and for a long line or broad panel the relationship changes. Still, the inverse-square rule is the everyday tool for predicting brightness at a distance and choosing mounting heights — raising a fixture even modestly noticeably reduces the light reaching the floor.

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