calcium light
Noun: A calcium light is a type of lamp that produces a very bright, white light. It works by directing an intense flame (often from burning hydrogen and oxygen) onto a cylinder of quicklime (calcium oxide). The heat causes the lime to glow incandescently, and a lens is used to focus this intense light. This device was historically used for stage lighting and in lighthouses before the invention of electric lights.
The term calcium light is used to refer specifically to this historical lighting apparatus. It is a technical and historical term.
Examples: * The actor was illuminated by the harsh, white beam of the calcium light. * Before modern spotlights, theaters relied on calcium lights to highlight performers on stage. * The museum exhibit featured an old calcium light used in 19th-century lighthouses.
- The calcium light is the source of the term limelight, which has become a common metaphor for public attention or fame (e.g., "to be in the limelight").
- Limelight (noun): This is the more common modern term derived from the calcium light. It primarily means the focus of public attention.
- The young singer stepped into the limelight after winning the competition.
- Limelight (when referring to the lighting apparatus itself, though it now more commonly means fame)
- Drummond light (another historical name for the same technology)
The word calcium light itself does not have multiple distinct meanings. It refers solely to this specific historical lamp. Its significance lies in its technological role and its contribution to the idiomatic expression "in the limelight."
- a lamp consisting of a flame directed at a cylinder of lime with a lens to concentrate the light; formerly used for stage lighting