Hi,
I was just wondering this last night after flashinging myself with a P3D Rebel 100 on Turbo. It left some spots in my eyes for a while but then, luckily, everything returned to normal.
But it made me think about roughly how many lumens/lux before you do yourself or someone else some permanent damage?
Cheers,
Face
What matters isn't light per se, but the amount of energy delivered to the retina per unit area.
If you can calculate the J/m^2 values for the eye at a given distance, you'll have a good guideline.
However, further complication lies in the fact that before the light hits the retina, it will pass through the rest of the eye structures, which scatter/absorb/transmit different wavelengths differently. Because of that, the final amount of energy delivered to the retina will vary depending on the type of the light source.
A coherent light source, such as a laser, will remain coherent while passing through the eye, and will thus deliver its energy very efficiently to the retina (not to mention the effects of positive interference of coherent waves)... which is why even a 5-10mW laser could cause eye damage.
When a non-coherent beam strikes the eye, the different wavelengths not be transmitted the same way, thus dissipating the energy over the different tissue layers.
The final layer of complication again has to do with the way different wavelengths interact with tissues, and the fact that shorter waves carry more energy.