Welcome everyone.

The TeleLumen Blog is moving.
Please follow the ground-breaking accomplishments of the TeleLumen team as they follow their quest to "truly capture true light" using the following link: http://telelumen.com/blog

On July 13th, 2011, Telelumen is mounting an expedition to climb the summit of Mt. Fuji in to take unique spectrographic recordings of daylight from sunrise to sunset.
In conjunction with this expedition, we invite our friends to contribute NOW to the Red Cross Japan Earthquake relief fund via:
- The Red Cross webpage
or send a txt message to the Red Cross Disaster Relief fund:

- Text REDCROSS to 90999 to Give $10


After you have contributed, please leave a comment on this blog and your name will be read at the Summit of Mt. Fuji during our expedition by John Giddings, our Vice President of Business Development, and leader of the expedition.
Thank you for your support of the Japanese People and our expedition.
http://telelumen.com/

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Mt. Whitney: follow up

We've discovered something very interesting about the light recordings we made at the Summit of Mt. Fuji. The light is even more unique than we had anticipated and reproduces very well with the Telelumen LED Luminaire. Because we are curious about the surprising attributes, we are mounting a quick expedition to the Mt. Whitney, the tallest mountain in the 48 United States at 14505 feet (4421 m).
From several points up the East face of Mt. Whitney, we will collect spectrographic and irradiance data for direct Sun, Full sky and the northern sky. With this corroborating data, we will be able to identify and highlight the uniqueness of the Mt. Fuji Sunrise recordings.
The trek up Mt. Whitney is 22 miles round trip, departing before sunrise, we will return by nightfall.