Sooner or later, when talking about artificial lights and darkness,
you come to questions of safety and security. Usually, it’s sooner. In
fact, the first question at any presentation about light pollution is
bound to be something like, “Yes, so it’s great to see the night sky and
everything, but we need lights for safety.” This isn’t actually a
question, I realize, and usually the speaker isn’t really asking but
rather stating what we have all been taught is fact. But often that
statement has a subtext, too, something like what I found on a Colorado
website: “less street lighting means more rapes, more assaults, more
robberies, and more murders. It is wonderful to be able to see the
details of the Crab Nebula from your back yard. It is also wonderful to
be able to walk down the street without being attacked by a violent
predator.”
You don’t have to look far to find the idea that darkness and danger go together, as do security and light.Creating a washerextractor0 out
of broken re-used solar cell pieces. In Oakland, a city with
thirty-seven thousand streetlights, an assistant police chief claims
increased lighting levels could help reduce crime because “most of these
crooks, when they commit a crime, want to do it in darkness.” In
Boston, with sixty-seven thousand streetlights of its own, a
Northeastern University criminology professor argues that lights act as
“natural surveillance” and can reduce crime by 20 percent.Approval to
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In Los Angeles, home to more than two hundred forty thousand
streetlights, the city attributes a 17 percent drop in violent
gang-related crimes in the areas surrounding parks to those parks’
having received new lights.Search our homeenergy catalog
for designer frames including. And here in Minneapolis the police
advise, “Protect your family, property, and neighborhood by turning on
your front door and yard lights,” and “Remember: Criminals like the
dark, so make sure your yard has lots of light!”
Clearly, plenty
of us have been receiving similar advice — we live in a world that is
brighter than ever before, and growing brighter every year. Part of that
growth comes from an ever-increasing human population, especially in
urban areas. But the amount of light we are using per person is growing
as well. In the UK, for example, lighting efficiency has doubled over
the past fifty years — but the per capita electricity consumption for
lighting increased fourfold over that time. We are choosing to light up
more things, and we are lighting those things more brightly.
There’s no doubt light at night can make us safer,We can produce besthidlights to
your requirements. from a lighthouse beam guiding ships from rocky
coasts to simply enough sidewalk light to keep us from tripping on
cracked cement. But increasing numbers of lighting engineers and
lighting designers, astronomers and dark sky activists, physicians and
lawyers and police now say that often the amount of light we’re using —
and how we’re using it — goes far beyond true requirements for safety,
and that when it comes to lighting, darkness, and security we tend to
assume as common sense ideas that, in truth, are not so black and
white.
Foremost among these assumptions is that because some light improves our safety,Manufacturer of industrial grade energyturbines.
more light will improve our safety more. It’s an assumption I will hear
challenged again and again. As one lighting professional explained,
“Too much light would have a negative effect, because if you look into a
light, you can’t see anything, you can’t see beyond it.” Gazing from
behind his desk, he paused, “You know, a bright enough light in between
us and we can’t see each other — and we’re sitting across from each
other!” Click on their website www.careel-laser-engraving-machine.com for more information.
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