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by TranscendL
3994 days ago
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It turns out that plants use more than just red/blue for photosynthesis. They do indeed absorb narrow bands of red/blue more strongly than other colors like green (this is why plants are green) but only absorb about 10% more efficiently. The green light not absorbed is reflected. This gives the opportunity for green photons to reflect their way down to the bottom leaves for a more distributed growth. We have built a number of lights with "focused" spectrum but haven't seen a benefit. In many plants, like "red" lettuces the leaves only turn red with a full spectrum (I have no idea why, a botanist might know the answer...) We do see a benefit to skew the spectrum for many flowering/fruiting plants in later growth cycles and have a plan to come out with a "fruiting spectrum" in the future. This will part of our August Indiegogo campaign. |
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One last question if you don't mind: do you see a market for this in small scale operations, or do market pressures force your customers to grow always bigger like in the rest of agriculture? It seems that the only (sustainable) way to make a profit on growing food (plants and animals) is by scaling up.
(OK I lied, I have another question actually: with the pressure on lighting system vendors in Europe to screen their customers for illegal operations, and increasing pressure to hold vendors accountable for such use, are you experiencing that American vendors actually have a market advantage on this? Do you export to Europe? (meta: who would have thought just 10 years ago that in 2015 the US would become the world's leader on high tech marijuana production!) also sorry for focusing on mj, your industry suffers from its association with it, I know - it's just that that market was the only non-academic source of knowledge on it for so long)