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Judd, D. B., MacAdam, D. L., Wyszecki, G., Budde, H. W., Condit, H. R., & Henderson, S. T., et al. (1964). Spectral distribution of typical daylight as a function of correlated color temperature. J. Opt. Soc. Am. 54(8), 1031–1040. 
Added by: Sarina (2013-02-21 16:19:11)   
Resource type: Journal Article
DOI: 10.1364/JOSA.54.001031
BibTeX citation key: Judd1964
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Categories: Englisch = English
Keywords: Sonne = Sun, Spektrum = Spectrum
Creators: Budde, Condit, Henderson, Judd, MacAdam, Simonds, Wyszecki
Collection: J. Opt. Soc. Am.
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Abstract
Spectral distributions of 622 samples of daylight (skylight, and sunlight plus skylight) have been subjected to characteristic vector analysis, as composite data and in three subgroups (99 distributions measured by Budde; 249, by Condit; and 274, by Henderson and Hodgkiss). The chromaticity coordinates (x,y) computed from these distributions have been compared with direct visual determinations of chromaticity coordinates of daylight by Nayatani and Wyszecki, and by Chamberlin, Lawrence, and Belbin. It was found that the chromaticities indicated by the spectral distributions and by direct visual colorimetry cluster about the curve: y $=$ 2.870x-3.000x2-0.275. This curve of typical daylight chromaticities falls slightly on the green side of the Planckian locus. From the mean and the first two characteristic vectors of the composite data, spectral distribution curves have been reconstituted by choice of scalar multiples of the vectors such that the chromaticity points fall on the curve of typical daylight chromaticities at places corresponding to correlated color temperatures of 4800\&\#x00B0;, 5500\&\#x00B0;, 6500\&\#x00B0;, 7500\&\#x00B0;, and 10000\&\#x00B0; K. The representative character of these reconstituted spectral-distribution curves has been established by comparison with the measured curves from each subgroup yielding the closest approximation to the same chromaticities. The agreement so found suggests that this family of curves is more representative of the various phases of daylight between correlated color temperatures 4800\&\#x00B0; and 10000\&\#x00B0;K than any previously derived distributions.
Added by: Sarina  
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