lumen-, lumin-, lum- +

(Latin: light, shine; torch, lamp; heavenly body)


bioluminescence, bioluminescent
1. The emission of light by living organisms; also, the light so produced.
2. Creatures that emit bioluminescent light include: fireflies, glowworms, certain fish, jelly fish, planktons, fungi, and bacteria.

Such light occurs when a pigment (usually luciferin) is oxidized without giving off heat. Although it is believed that bioluminescence is involved in animal communication, its function in many organisms has yet to be understood.

Bioluminescence is a form of chemiluminescence and most luminescent animals have a light-producing organ (photophore).

This may contain their own specialized light-producing cells, or house symbiotic luminescent bacteria.

Fish emitting bioluminescence.
Word Info image © Copyright, 2006.

The darkness of the ocean presents a variety of bioluminescent creatures

The most expansive animal habitat on the earth lies between the sea surface and the floor of the deep ocean basins. Within this enormous space live the largest and perhaps most remarkable biological communities of fauna.

Most creatures of this twilight world are able to augment the scant sunlight reaching them with another form of natural illumination known as bioluminescence.

Although bioluminescence is a relatively rare phenomenon in terrestrial ecosystems, the vast majority of the animals that inhabit the upper kilometer of the ocean are capable of producing light with photophores in one way or another.

The illustrated bioluminescent fish for this page is similar to a "flashlight fish" which has headlights made up of sacs of luminescent bacteria under its eyes that light its way around the ocean depths.

Before man caught up with nature, she developed her own uses for bioluminescence; for example, many predators use their natural lighting to catch their meals; as shown in the image.

—"Light in the Ocean's Midwaters" by Bruce H. Robinson;
Scientific American, July, 1995; and "Living Lights"
by Kenneth Jon Rose, Science Digest, January, 1984.

chemiluminescence, chemiluminescent, chemoluminescence, chemoluminescent
1. Emission of light accompanying a chemical reaction, as in the oxidation of phosphorus.
2. In physical chemistry, any process in which a chemical reaction produces visible light without a corresponding increase in temperature; for example, bioluminescence; such as the light generated by fireflies, is a form of chemiluminescence.
Dominus illuminatio mea.
The Lord is my light.

Motto of Oxford University, Oxford, UK. This motto is also translated as, "The Lord, my illumination."

electroluminescence, electroluminescent
The emission of light by something such as a gas or phosphor resulting from a high-frequency electric discharge.
galvanoluminescence
The radiation of light by tissue, caused by a galvanic electrical current.
illuminance
The amount of light, evaluated according to its capacity to produce visual stimulation, that reaches a unit of surface area during a unit of time. It is measured in lux (the SI unit of illumination, equal to one lumen per square meter).

A lumen is the unit of luminous flux in the International System, equal to the amount of light given out through a solid angle by a source of one candela intensity radiating equally in all directions.

One definition of candela that it is the SI unit of luminous intensity, symbol cd; it is equal to the luminous intensity in a given direction of a source that emits monochromatic radiation of frequency.

illuminant
Giving off light.
illuminate
1. To make something visible or bright with light, or be lit up.
2. To decorate something with lights for a celebration.
3. To make something clear, or easier to ulnderstand and to appreciate.
4. To add colored letters, illustrations, and designs to a manuscript or the borders of a page.
5. To provide someone with knowledge or with intellectual or spiritual enlightenment.
illuminati
Any one of various groups of people in history claiming to have received special religious or spiritual enlgihtenment.
illuminating
Informative and enlightening, often by revealing or emphasizing facts that were previously obscure.
illuminating oil
An earlier name for kerosene.
illumination
1. The provision of light to make something visible or bright, or the fact of being lit up.
2. The amount or strength of light available in a place or for a purpose.
3. The application and distribution of light to a subject.
4. The process of clarifying or explaining something.
5. Intellectual or spiritual enlightenment.
6. A colored letter, design, or illustration decorating a manuscript or page, or the art or act of decorating written texts.
7. In medicine, throwing light on the body or a part or into a cavity for diagnostic purposes or lighting an object under a microscope.
illumine
To give light to; illuminate (provide or brighten with light).
illuminism
A psychotic state of exaltation in which one has delusions and hallucinations of communion with supernatural or exalted beings.
In lumine tuo videbimus lumen.
In Thy light we shall see the light.

Also translated as, "In Thy light shall we see light." Motto of Columbia University, New York City, USA; and the College of Great Falls, Great Falls, Montana, USA.


Etymologically related "light, shine, glow" word families: ethero-; fulg-; luco-; luna, luni-; lustr-; phengo-; pheno-; phospho-; photo-; scinti-, scintill-; splendo-.


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