🔦 fc to nx — Foot-candle to Nox Converter

Convert illuminance units — lux, foot-candle, phot, nox and more.

1 unit =
From
To
Formula 1 fc = 1.076e+04 nx
UnitNameValue
lx Lux 10.7639
ph Phot 0.00107639
nx Nox 10763.9
klx Kilolux 0.0107639
mlx Millilux 10763.9

Quick Answer

Formula: Nox = Foot-candle × 1.076e+04

Multiply any Foot-candle value by 1.076e+04 to get Nox.

Reverse: Foot-candle = Nox × 9.2903e-5

Worked Examples

0.001 fc
0.001 fc × 1.076e+04 = 10.76 nx
Very low light.
1 fc
1 fc × 1.076e+04 = 1.076e+04 nx
1 unit reference.
100 fc
100 fc × 1.076e+04 = 1.076e+06 nx
100 units — indoor lighting range.
10000 fc
10000 fc × 1.076e+04 = 1.076e+08 nx
10,000 units — bright outdoor daylight.

Foot-candle to Nox Conversion Table

Common illuminance levels — factor: 1 fc = 1.076e+04 nx

Foot-candle (fc)Nox (nx)Context
0.0001 fc1.076 nxMoonless night
0.001 fc10.76 nxDark countryside
0.01 fc107.6 nxMoonlit road
0.1 fc1076 nxFull moon
1 fc1.076e+04 nxDark corridor
5 fc5.382e+04 nxStairway / passage
10 fc1.076e+05 nxLobby
30 fc3.229e+05 nxOffice minimum
50 fc5.382e+05 nxIES office standard
100 fc1.076e+06 nxSurgical minimum
200 fc2.153e+06 nxDetailed surgery
500 fc5.382e+06 nxClose inspection
1000 fc1.076e+07 nxExtreme inspection
5000 fc5.382e+07 nxHazy sunlight
1.2e+04 fc1.292e+08 nxBright sun

Mental Math Tricks

Exact factor

1 fc = 1.076e+04 nx.

Lux anchor

Key references: 1 lx = 0.0929 fc. 1 fc = 10.764 lx. 1 phot = 10,000 lx.

Reverse

Multiply result by 9.2903e-5 to recover the original fc value.

Who Uses This Conversion?

Lighting Designer

Specifies illuminance levels in lux (metric) or foot-candles (US) for architectural, retail, and workplace lighting per IES and EN 12464 standards.

Photographer

Measures scene illuminance in lux with a light meter to set correct exposure for available-light photography.

Building Inspector

Verifies that workplace lighting meets minimum requirements (typically 500 lx for offices, 300 lx for corridors) per local regulations.

Horticulturalist

Monitors grow-light illuminance in klx to optimize plant growth — fruiting plants typically need 20–60 klx.

Medical Researcher

Prescribes and measures light therapy intensity in lux for SAD treatment (10,000 lx standard) and circadian rhythm research.

Display Calibration Engineer

Measures ambient light in lux to set appropriate display backlight levels for consistent image quality.

Frequently Asked Questions

About Foot-candle and Nox

Foot-candle (fc)

The foot-candle (fc) is the US customary unit of illuminance, defined as one lumen per square foot. One foot-candle = 10.7639 lux. It has been used in North American lighting specifications since the early 20th century and remains standard in US architectural and theatrical lighting.

US lighting standards use foot-candles: Illuminating Engineering Society (IES) specifies office work at 30–50 fc (300–500 lx), surgery at 200–400 fc, and roadway lighting at 0.5–2 fc. Stage lighting designers in North America universally work in foot-candles.

Interesting fact: The foot-candle's name reflects its origin — the illuminance on a surface one foot from a standard candle. The international candle standard was defined in 1909, and American lighting engineers adopted the foot-candle as their practical working unit from that era.

Nox (nx)

The nox (nx) is an obsolete unit of illuminance equal to 0.001 lux = 1 millilux, proposed for measuring very low light levels in dim conditions. It was never widely adopted and is not recognized by any current standards body.

The nox was briefly proposed in some mid-20th century photometry literature specifically for mesopic and scotopic (low-light) illuminance measurements where lux values would be very small fractions. It never entered widespread use.

Interesting fact: The nox is one of the rarest photometric units — it rarely appears even in specialty lighting engineering texts. Its value equals exactly 1 millilux, making it redundant once millilux became the preferred notation for low illuminance levels.

About Foot-candle to Nox Conversion

Illuminance measures light falling on a surface. The SI unit is lux (lm/m²); the US standard is foot-candles (lm/ft²). Key reference levels: moonless night ~0.001 lx, full moon ~1 lx, office work 500 lx, SAD therapy 10,000 lx, bright sunlight 100,000 lx.

Exact factor: 1 fc = 1.076e+04 nx. Reverse: 1 nx = 9.2903e-5 fc.

All conversions use IEEE 754 double-precision arithmetic, accurate to at least 8 significant figures.