Well, the point is that not ALL of the UV mercury light gets transformed by the bulb phosphors and a part of the UV actually escapes out of the bulb.
I think a paper can be thought of as a nearly perfectly white object, so it absorbs just very little visible light. However, it absorbs the UV and actually adds visible blue emission, which e.g. aluminum reflector can't do.
In my opinion it is also somewhat easier to design a wide angle flood light (which is what I want to do) with a "diffusive reflector" (such as the paper) than with "reflective reflector".
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« Last Edit: May 22, 2009, 04:16:06 PM by bluelight »
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