The Ceramic discharge metal halide (CDM) lamp is a relatively new source of light that is a variation of the old (high-pressure) mercury-vapour lamp. The discharge is contained in a ceramic tube. During operation, the temperature of this ceramic tube can exceed 1200 Kelvin. The ceramic tube is filled with mercury, argon and metal halide salts. Because of the high wall temperature, the metal halide salts are partly vaporized. Inside the hot plasma, these salts are dissociated into metallic atoms and iodine. The metallic atoms are the main source of light in these lamps, creating a bluish light that is close to daylight with a CRI (color rendering index) of up to 96. The exact correlated color temperature and CRI depend on the specific mixture of metal halide salts. There are also warm-white DCM lamps, with somewhat lower CRI (78-82) which still give a more clear and natural-looking light than the old mercury-vapour and sodium-vapour lamps when used as street lights, besides being more economical to use. CDM lamps give five times more light than comparable tungsten incandescent light bulbs (80-117lm/W) and retain colour stability better than most other gas discharge lamps. Applications for these lamps include television- and film making as well as shop lighting, digital photography, street- and architectural lighting.