Collection: Sleep & Recovery

LIGHTING FOR CIRCADIAN & NEUROLOGICAL STABILITY

ULTRA-LOW / ZERO FLICKER · CIRCADIAN SPECTRUM CONTROL · EVENING RED LIGHT

Modern lighting is not biologically neutral. Two variables drive its impact: temporal light modulation (flicker) and spectral timing (circadian input).

Standard LED systems often introduce high-frequency modulation and blue-enriched evening light, both associated with increased neural stimulation and disruption of normal circadian signaling.

LOWEN lighting is engineered to minimize flicker and align spectral output across the day—delivering blue-enriched light during waking hours and warmer, lower-circadian-impact light in the evening.

Controlled human studies demonstrate that typical indoor lighting can suppress melatonin and delay circadian timing (Gooley et al., 2011; Chang et al., 2015), while blue-depleted evening lighting significantly reduces melatonin suppression compared to standard conditions (Rahman et al., 2017). Temporal light modulation is a measurable property governed by international lighting standards (CIE TN 012:2021).

This is not a therapeutic claim. It is a more controlled lighting environment, designed in alignment with established circadian and lighting science.