Sleep Science · Circadian Health · 2026

How Does Light Affect Sleep? A 2026 Guide to Galaxy Projectors, Night Lights, and Better Sleep

Light is one of the most powerful signals for your body clock — but the biology is more nuanced than "avoid blue light." Here is what the research actually says about timing, intensity, spectrum, and evening lighting choices.

By Lauren Hayes Updated June 2026 9 min read

How Light Reaches Your Body Clock

The pathway from your eyes to your circadian pacemaker.

Light does more than help us see. It is one of the main environmental signals used by the human circadian system — the internal timing network that organizes sleep, alertness, hormone secretion, body temperature, and other daily rhythms.

The retina contains rods and cones for vision, as well as a small population of intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs). These cells express the photopigment melanopsin and are especially sensitive to sustained short-wavelength, blue-green light, with sensitivity peaking near 480 nm.

ipRGCs send light information through the retinohypothalamic tract to the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) in the hypothalamus — the body's central circadian pacemaker. The SCN uses light-dark signals to adjust its timing and coordinate daily rhythms across the brain and body.

Key point: Melatonin is a timing signal associated with biological night — it is not a sedative switch. Evening light that suppresses melatonin delays when your body expects sleep to begin.

A controlled laboratory study by Gooley and colleagues found that ordinary room light before bedtime delayed melatonin onset and shortened melatonin duration compared with dim light. Other research found that the illuminance needed to produce the same degree of evening melatonin suppression differed by more than an order of magnitude between participants — individual variation is significant.

Five Dimensions of Light Dose

There is no single brightness or color that is automatically stimulating or sleep-friendly.

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1. Timing

Light during the biological evening and early night generally shifts circadian timing later. Light during the biological morning shifts it earlier. This is why the same lamp can support daytime alertness in the morning and interfere with wind-down at night.

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2. Intensity at the Eye

The relevant exposure is the light that reaches your eye — not a bulb's wattage or a product's maximum output. Distance, direction, room surfaces, beam spread, and pupil size all matter. Traditional illuminance is measured in photopic lux, but lux does not fully describe stimulation of melanopsin.

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3. Spectrum

Short-wavelength visible light is particularly effective at stimulating melanopsin — which is why blue-rich light receives so much attention. But "blue light" is an incomplete shorthand. A warm-looking light is not biologically inactive, and a blue-looking light is not automatically harmful. Spectrum must always be considered alongside total exposure.

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4. Duration and Pattern

A brief glance is not equivalent to hours of continuous exposure. Intermittent light pulses can produce meaningful phase shifts even when total time is short. Circadian dose is more complex than simply multiplying lux by minutes.

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5. Individual Sensitivity and Light History

Daytime light exposure changes sensitivity to light later in the day. Age, pupil size, chronotype, medication, and recent light history also affect the response. Population-level recommendations cannot be treated as a guaranteed setting for every individual.

Why Warm Light Is Not Automatically Sleep-Friendly

Correlated color temperature (CCT) describes the visual appearance of white light. It does not reveal the complete spectral power distribution. Many warm-white LEDs use a blue pump combined with phosphors — meaning a source labeled 2700 K or 3000 K can still retain a short-wavelength peak.

Esposito and Houser modeled practical LED spectra and found that at 300 photopic lux, sources from 2500 K to 6000 K produced melanopic EDI values ranging from 123 to 354 lux. Even at the same 5000 K CCT, melanopic EDI ranged from 196 to 319 lux as the spectrum varied.

The defensible statement: A light is more suitable for evening use when the melanopic exposure at the eye is low, the overall illuminance is low, the exposure is limited, and it occurs at an appropriate circadian time. CCT alone cannot establish any of this.

Lux, CCT, Melanopic EDI — What Each Metric Actually Means

A quick reference for understanding light measurement terms used in sleep science.

Metric What It Describes Main Limitation for Circadian Use
Photopic lux Illuminance weighted by the CIE photopic visual sensitivity function Two equal-lux sources can have different spectra and melanopic effects
CCT (kelvin) Whether white light appears relatively warm or cool An appearance metric only — does not specify spectral power distribution
Melanopic EDI (lux) Illuminance of standard daylight D65 that produces the same melanopic response Describes one photoreceptor-weighted stimulus; not a guaranteed health outcome
EML An older equivalent-melanopic-lux quantity used in some building guidance Based on a different convention; not numerically interchangeable with melanopic EDI without the defined conversion

Evidence-Based Light Targets Across 24 Hours

From an international expert consensus published in PLOS Biology.

Daytime

≥ 250 lux melanopic EDI

Beginning in the morning. Strong daytime light is essential — it sets the amplitude of the circadian signal and makes the body more capable of winding down at night.

Before Bed

≤ 10 lux melanopic EDI

During the three hours before bedtime. This is significantly lower than typical indoor room lighting and most overhead light sources.

During Sleep

≤ 1 lux melanopic EDI

The sleep environment should be as dark as possible. When light is unavoidable, keep melanopic exposure at the eye below 1 lux.

These are consensus recommendations for healthy adults — not a clinical diagnosis or individualized treatment. Their most important message: healthy light is a 24-hour pattern, not just an evening rule.

Do Screens Actually Affect Sleep?

Screens combine light exposure with stimulating content, notifications, and delayed bedtime. A randomized crossover study of light-emitting e-readers found reduced evening sleepiness, suppressed melatonin, delayed circadian timing, and reduced next-morning alertness compared with reading a printed book.

That result does not prove that every brief screen exposure causes insomnia. Screen size, brightness, distance, spectral setting, duration, content, and surrounding room light all change the exposure. Reducing brightness and short-wavelength output may reduce the light stimulus, while ending prolonged screen use addresses both light and behavioral effects simultaneously.

Product Guidance

What This Means for Galaxy Projectors

How to use ambient light devices in a way that supports rather than disrupts your sleep.

Ambient projectors are designed for atmosphere and entertainment. Their effect on evening light exposure depends on measured output and use conditions — not the product category alone.

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Use the dimmest comfortable setting

Lower brightness means lower total melanopic exposure at the eye. Most galaxy projectors allow you to control brightness independently from the projection itself.

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Avoid staring directly into the lens

Ceiling projection keeps light directed away from your eyes. Position the projector on the floor pointing upward — this keeps your gaze soft and indirect.

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Favour static or slow-moving scenes

Fast visual motion can be alerting. Slow rotation or a still disc reduces neural stimulation and makes the projection more compatible with wind-down.

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Limit bright RGB settings near bedtime

Rich blue-dominant or high-saturation RGB colour modes near bedtime increase short-wavelength exposure. Warm or amber tones are a lower-melanopic choice when measurements are not available.

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Always use the auto-off timer

The FlyLily UFO includes 1h, 2h, and 4h timers. Setting the timer before bed ensures the projector shuts down completely while you sleep — keeping your environment dark through the night.

Practical Evening Light Checklist

Seven habits that support healthy circadian signalling before bed.

  • Get substantial outdoor or bright indoor light during the morning and daytime
  • Reduce overall room brightness during the last two to three hours before bed
  • Choose lower melanopic output where measurement data are available
  • Keep light sources below or away from the direct line of sight where practical
  • Reduce long, bright screen sessions before sleep — especially on large, close screens
  • Use timers on ambient devices and remove unnecessary light during sleep
  • Seek clinical advice for persistent insomnia, excessive daytime sleepiness, or suspected circadian-rhythm disorders

Frequently Asked Questions

Blue-rich light is particularly effective at stimulating melanopsin, which can delay melatonin and shift your body clock later. But "blue light" is an oversimplification — intensity, timing, duration, and total exposure matter as much as colour. A brief, dim exposure is very different from hours of bright blue-rich light near bedtime.
Longer-wavelength (warm or red) light often creates less melanopsin stimulation than blue-rich light at the same brightness. However, colour alone is not a guarantee — a very bright red source can still be alerting or visually disruptive. The practical rule is to use the least light needed and limit duration.
An international expert consensus published in PLOS Biology recommends no more than 10 lux melanopic EDI at the eye during the three hours before bedtime for healthy adults. This is significantly lower than typical indoor room lighting.
Yes, when used correctly. A galaxy projector set to dim, slow rotation, aimed at the ceiling and paired with an auto-off timer creates a low-stimulation environment that can support a wind-down routine. It is not a clinically validated sleep treatment — but it replaces brighter, harsher room lighting with a gentler alternative.
Yes. The UFO includes adjustable brightness, dimmable RGB ambient lighting, slow rotation modes, 15 built-in soundscapes, and 1h, 2h, and 4h auto-off timers. These features support a low-stimulation, timed evening routine — though the device itself is not a medical device and does not treat sleep disorders.
Melanopic EDI (equivalent daylight illuminance) is the internationally standardised way to measure how much light stimulates the melanopsin system in the eye. It is more informative for circadian purposes than photopic lux or CCT alone, because it captures the light that most directly influences your body clock.

References

  1. Brown TM, et al. Recommendations for daytime, evening, and nighttime indoor light exposure to best support physiology, sleep, and wakefulness in healthy adults. PLOS Biology. Read article
  2. Gooley JJ, et al. Exposure to room light before bedtime suppresses melatonin onset and shortens melatonin duration in humans. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. 2011;96(3):E463-E472. Read article
  3. Chang AM, et al. Evening use of light-emitting eReaders negatively affects sleep, circadian timing, and next-morning alertness. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2015;112(4):1232-1237. Read article
  4. St Hilaire MA, et al. Dynamic lighting schedules to facilitate circadian adaptation to shifted timing of sleep and wake. Journal of Pineal Research. 2022;73(1):e12805. Read article
  5. Harvard Health Publishing. Blue light has a dark side. Read article
  6. Johns Hopkins Medicine. Melatonin for sleep: Does it work? Read article
  7. Sleep Foundation. Melatonin side effects. Read article

Medical disclaimer: This article provides general educational information and is not medical advice. A galaxy projector is not a treatment for insomnia, circadian-rhythm disorders, anxiety, or other health conditions. The cited studies do not test or endorse FlyLily products. Consult a qualified healthcare professional about persistent sleep problems.

Lauren Hayes

Lauren Hayes

Lauren Hayes is a home and family lifestyle writer at FlyLily, specializing in children's sleep environments, educational room design, and space-inspired décor. She enjoys exploring how lighting and creative spaces can help families create more engaging and comforting bedtime routines.

 

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