Is the Inverse Square Lux calculation accurate for flashlights?

Blindasabat

Flashlight Enthusiast
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The inverse square law appears to assume that the radiation is a point source. Since flashlights use a collimating optic of some sort that projects light off of a surface of a definite area, I surmise that calculating lux at one distance based on lux measured at another distance may be subject to some inaccuracy. The point source may be a virtual point some distance behind the flashlight. It is likely difficult to determine that point.
The extreme example of this is a laser.
Has anyone taken lux readings of the same light at several distances to see if they confirm the inverse square law is accurate?
 
There has been discussion regarding this topic recently, and mudman cj did this thread last year, a pretty good study.

Bill
 
I figured the discussion would have been in this sub-forum so I searched here for it. My bad. Thanks for the link. It is exactly what I was looking for.
 
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