High-intensity discharge lamp

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High-intensity discharge (HID) lamps include the groups of electrical lights commonly known as mercury vapor, metal halide, high-pressure sodium, and xenon short-arc lamps. The light-producing element of these lamp types is a well-stabilized arc discharge contained within a refractory envelope (arc tube) with wall loading in excess of 3 W/cm² (19.4 W/in.²).

Compared to fluorescent and incandescent lamps, HID lamps produce a large quantity of light in a small package.

HID lamps produce light by striking an electrical arc across tungsten electrodes housed inside a specially designed inner fused quartz or fused alumina tube. This tube is filled with both gas and metals. The gas aids in the starting of the lamps. Then, the metals produce the light once they are heated to a point of evaporation. Like fluorescent lamps, HID lamps require a ballast to start and maintain their operation.

Types of HID lamps include mercury vapor (CRI range 15-55), metal halide (CRI range 65-80), and high-pressure sodium (CRI range 22-75). Mercury vapor lamps, which originally produced a bluish-green light, were the first commercially available HID lamps. Today, they are also available in a color corrected, whiter light. But they are still often being replaced by the newer, more efficient high-pressure sodium and metal halide lamps. Standard high-pressure sodium lamps have the highest efficiency of all HID lamps, but they produce a yellowish light. High-pressure sodium lamps that produce a whiter light are now available, but efficiency is somewhat sacrificed. Metal halide lamps are less efficient but produce an even whiter, more natural light. Colored metal halide lamps are also available.

HID lamps are typically used when high levels of light are required over large areas and when energy efficiency and/or long life are desired. These areas include gymnasiums, large public areas, warehouses, outdoor activity areas, roadways, parking lots, and pathways. More recently, however, HID sources, especially metal halide, have been used in small retail and residential environments.

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Sources of light / lighting
Natural/Prehistoric light sources:
bioluminescence (Fireflies, Foxfire, et cetera) | Celestial objects | Lightning
Combustion-based light sources:
Acetylene/Carbide lamps | Candle | Davy lamps | Fire | Gas lighting | Kerosene lamp | Limelight | Oil lamp | Rushlight
Nuclear/direct chemical light sources:
Betalights | Chemoluminescence/Lightsticks
Electric light sources:
Arc lamp | Incandescent | Fluorescent
High-intensity discharge:
HMI lamps | Mercury-vapor lamps | Metal halide lamps | Sodium vapor lamps | Xenon arc lamps
Other electric:
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ja:高圧放電灯
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