Thanks for that, the diagramme makes it clear. If manufacturers stick to the t.5 figure, integrals would make more sense for comparison.
Basically, manufacturers do stick to the t.5 figure - but as you can see from the chart, or from any other oscilloscope trace, the flash doesn't start life at full power, it takes a (short) time to reach full height, which means that integrals can't work in absolute terms.
As both Richard and I keep saying, it's complicated.
The Bron figure shows how the colour changes as the flash decays - OK, that's greatly exaggerated for the purposes of illustration, but that is what happens.
So how is the colour temperature change relevant in the real world?
Well, in two ways. You can see that the flash very quickly reaches a blue, or cold colour. From my own tests, I would say that at it's bluest colour it is something like 1000-1200K (degrees Kelvin) above 'normal' and measures at around 6000 - 6200K. As the flash tails off, it becomes warmer and the mix of warm and cold ends up with something around 5000K, which is generally accepted to be about right.
Now, if you use a IGBT controlled flash (mainly hotshoe flash but there are some others too) which give you the benefit of very short flash durations at lower power settings, a low power setting will cut off the orange/red 'tail' of the flash and the colour of the flash that's left will be decidedly blue. If that flash is the only light source then you can change the colour PP, but if it's only lighting part of the subject and other parts are lit by say the ambient light, then you'll have say one side of the face looking 'normal' and the other half looking blue...
The other thing, which is very relevant to t.5 times, is that the tail becomes more and more red as the energy reduces. Now, with some well-designed flashes it becomes very red very quickly, and soon gets almost to the infra-red part of the spectrum, which means that it becomes invisible (or nearly so) and because of this has no visible effect on the shot.
The effect of this is that although the t.5 time may
appear to be fairly long, in practical terms the bit that's in the visible spectrum is less long, so can't contribute much to either the overall exposure or to movement blur.
It's because of this that some people say that the t.5 time is about twice as long as the t.1 time and that other people say that it's about 3 times as long as the t.5 time. Both views are right and both are wrong - it depends on how quickly the colour moves out of the visible spectrum, and isn't a rule that can be applied to all flash heads regardless of manufacturer/design.
I hope this makes sense - it probably won't even make sense to me when I see it on the page
