About Light Properties
Every light in a drawing has general and specific lighting properties that can be
changed after the light is placed.
When a light is selected, its properties can be changed from the Properties palette.
Light properties are grouped into the following categories:
- General. Properties common to all light types.
- Photometric Properties. Photometric related properties that are available when the LIGHTINGUNITS system variable
is set to 1 or 2. - Geometry. Properties that define the position, target, or direction of a light.
- Attenuation. Properties that control how light is diminished over distance.
General Properties
The following properties are common to all lights:
- Name. Specifies the name assigned to the light.
- Type. Specifies the type of light: Point, Spotlight, Distant, or Web.
- On/Off Status. Controls whether the light is enabled.
- Intensity factor. Sets a multiplier that controls brightness.
Intensity is not related to attenuation.
- Filter color. Sets the color of the light emitted.
- Plot glyph. Controls whether light glyphs are plottable.
Spotlight Properties: Hotspot and Falloff
When light from a spotlight falls onto a surface, the area of maximum illumination
is surrounded by an area of lesser intensity.

- Hotspot cone angle. Defines the brightest part of a light beam. Also known as the beam angle.
- Falloff cone angle. Defines the full cone of light. Also known as the field angle.
- Rapid decay area. Consists of the region between the hotspot and falloff angles.
The greater the difference between the hotspot and falloff angles, the softer the
edge of the light beam. If the hotspot and falloff angles are near equal, the edge
of the light beam is sharp. Both values can range from 0 to 160 degrees. You can also
adjust these values directly with the Hotspot and Falloff grips.
Photometric Properties
Photometric lighting offers additional properties to define lighting that represents
real world light sources. The following properties are under the Photometric Properties
category:
- Lamp intensity. Specifies the inherent brightness of the light. Specifies the intensity, flux, or
illuminance of the lamp. - Resulting intensity. Gives the final brightness of the light. (Product of lamp intensity and intensity
factor. Read-only.) - Lamp color. Specifies the inherent color of the light in Kelvin temperature or standard.
- Resulting color. Gives the final color of the light. This is determined by a combination of the lamp
color and filter color. (Product of lamp color and filter color. Read-only.)
If the type of light selected is a weblight, additional properties are offered in
the Photometric Web and Web Offsets sub-categories.
- Web file. Specifies the IES data file describing the intensity distribution of the light.
- Web preview. Displays a 2D slice through goniometric data.
- Rotation of X. Specifies a rotational offset of the web about the optical X axis.
- Rotation of Y. Specifies a rotational offset of the web about the optical Y axis.
- Rotation of Z. Specifies a rotational offset of the web about the optical Z axis.
Attenuation Properties (Point Light and Spotlight)
Attenuation controls how light diminishes over distance. The farther away an object
is from a light, the darker the object appears. You can specify no attenuation, inverse
linear, or inverse squared. All photometric lights use inverse squared attenuation
and don’t support the use of light limits; the settings under the Attenuation category
are disabled when the LIGHTINGUNITS system variable is set to 1 or 2.
square attenuation. This option is maintained for backwards compatibility with AutoCAD
2015-based products and earlier releases.
The following attenuation types are available for standard lights:
- None. Attenuation is disabled. Objects far from the point light are as bright as objects
close to the light. - Inverse Linear. Sets attenuation to be the inverse of the linear distance from the light. For example,
at a distance of 2 units, light is half as strong as at the point light; at a distance
of 4 units, light is one quarter as strong. The default value for inverse linear is
half the maximum intensity. - Inverse Square. Sets attenuation to be the inverse of the square of the distance from the light.
For example, at a distance of 2 units, light is one quarter as strong as at the point
light; at a distance of 4 units, light is one sixteenth as strong.
lights. It is recommended to update all standard lights in a scene to photometric
lights.
Another way to control the attenuation for standard lights is to use limits. Limits
work like clipping planes to control where light is first emitted and where it stops.
Using limits can increase performance by removing the need for the program to calculate
light levels where the light is already practically invisible.

Geometry Properties
The Geometry properties of a light define its position and the direction in which
light is emitted. If the light is a target point light, spotlight, or weblight, additional
target point properties are available. The Target property of a light can also be turned on or off. Distant lights are defined using
a from, to, and source vector.
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