Lamberts to Nits
1 Lamberts equals 3,183.098862 Nits using fixed luminance constants anchored to candela per square meter.
Direct Answer
1 Lamberts equals 3,183.098862 Nits
This conversion uses fixed luminance constants anchored to candela per square meter.
For 5 Lamberts, the result equals 15,915.494309 Nits.
Converter Calculator
3,183.098862 Nits (nit)
SwitchExplanation
This page converts Lamberts into Nits using fixed luminance constants anchored to candela per square meter. The direct answer, calculator, and common values table all follow the same factor.
Formula: Nits = Lamberts × 3,183.098862. Why: legacy luminance units such as foot-lamberts, lamberts, apostilbs, and stilbs each use fixed cd/m² equivalents, so the calculator normalizes through candela per square meter before applying the target unit.
Lamberts (L): a legacy luminance unit with a fixed candela-per-square-meter equivalent.
Nits (nit): a common display-brightness term numerically equal to candela per square meter.
This route is useful when comparing modern display-brightness values with legacy luminance units used in projection, cinema, and older photometric references.
Because the route stays inside one cd/m2-based luminance model, the mirror page reverses the same constants without changing the underlying assumptions.
Common Conversion Values
| Lamberts (L) | Nits (nit) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 3,183.098862 |
| 5 | 15,915.494309 |
| 10 | 31,830.988618 |
| 50 | 159,154.943092 |
| 100 | 318,309.886184 |
| 500 | 1,591,549.43092 |
| 1,000 | 3,183,098.86184 |
Frequently Asked Questions
How many nits are in 1 lamberts?
1 Lamberts equals 3,183.098862 Nits on this page.
Why is Lamberts to Nits useful in display and projection work?
This route is useful when comparing modern display-brightness values with legacy luminance units used in cinema, projection, calibration, and older imaging references.
When would I convert lamberts to nits?
Use this route when you need to restate luminance values across display, projection, or calibration scales without changing the underlying brightness basis.
How do I reverse Lamberts to Nits?
Use the mirror Nits to Lamberts route; it applies the inverse relationship with the same cd/m²-based luminance assumptions.