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The '''Color rendering index''', or '''CRI''', is a measure of the ability of a light source to reproduce the colors of various objects being lit by the source. It is a method devised by the [[International Commission on Illumination]] (CIE). The best possible rendition of colors is specified by a CRI of one hundred, while the very poorest rendition is specified by a CRI of zero. For a source like a low-pressure [[sodium vapor lamp]], which is monochromatic, the CRI is nearly zero, but for a source like an [[incandescent light bulb]], which emits essentially [[blackbody radiation]], it is nearly a hundred. The CRI is measured by comparing the color rendering of the test source to that of a "perfect" source which is generally a black body radiator, except for sources with [[color temperature]]s above 5000K, in which case a simulated daylight (e.g. [[D65]]) is used. For example, a standard "cool white" [[fluorescent lamp]] will have a CRI near 62. Newer "triphosphor" fluorescents often claim a CRI of 80 to 85.
CRI is a quantitatively measurable index, not a subjective one. A reference source, such as
The standard formula consists of measuring the color indices of eight sample colors on the 1964 W*U*V* uniform color space (which is now obsolete). The indices of the samples are first measured while being illuminated by the reference source, yielding indices <math>[W_{i0},U_{i0},V_{i0}]</math> where the index ''i'' specifies the particular sample color. The indices of the samples are then measured under the test source yielding indices <math>[W_i,U_i,V_i]</math>. The distances <math>\Delta E_i</math> between the measured colors is then calculated:
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