General Information
Use of an artificial source of light for
illumination. It is a key element of
architecture and interior design. Residential
lighting uses mainly either
incandescent lamps or
fluorescent lamps and often depends heavily
on movable fixtures plugged into outlets;
built-in lighting is typically found in
kitchens, bathrooms, and corridors and in the
form of hanging pendants in dining rooms and
sometimes recessed fixtures in living rooms.
Lighting in nonresidential buildings is
predominantly fluorescent. High-pressure
sodium-vapor lamps have higher
efficiency and are used in industrial
applications.
Halogen lamps have residential, industrial,
and photographic applications. Depending on
their fixtures, lamps (bulbs) produce a variety
of lighting conditions. Incandescent lamps
placed in translucent glass globes create
diffuse effects; in recessed ceiling-mounted
fixtures with reflectors, they can light walls
or floors evenly. Fluorescent fixtures are
typically recessed and rectangular, with
prismatic lenses, but other types including
indirect cove lights and luminous ceilings, in which
lamps are placed above suspended translucent
panels. Mercury-vapor and high-pressure
sodium-vapor lamps are placed in simple
reflectors in industrial spaces, in pole-mounted
streetlight fixtures, and in indirect
up-lighting fixtures for commercial applications.



