cobshopgrow
Well-Known Member
i would agree that the sky always provide some diffuse light, depending on where you are and season youre in it will differ a lot.
there is no number mentioned sadly.
"A clear, dry atmosphere will produce a large amount of direct light but little diffuse light. You’ll see a high contrast between dark shadows and brightly illuminated surfaces. "
large and little are the max, lol.
i think its still hard to compare a artifical point light source with the sun.
i can go with a spectrometer on a football field and will measure everywhere about the same at noon, if 10m high or at ground.
thats still a freakin even soup of light compared to what we have even using 1000s of leds in a tent.
if flat or round earther, looking at the sun .. better not... it looks like a point and its a source, so yes, point source absolute, but its nothing we can reproduce using tiny artifical point light sources.
there is no number mentioned sadly.
"A clear, dry atmosphere will produce a large amount of direct light but little diffuse light. You’ll see a high contrast between dark shadows and brightly illuminated surfaces. "
large and little are the max, lol.
i think its still hard to compare a artifical point light source with the sun.
i can go with a spectrometer on a football field and will measure everywhere about the same at noon, if 10m high or at ground.
thats still a freakin even soup of light compared to what we have even using 1000s of leds in a tent.
if flat or round earther, looking at the sun .. better not... it looks like a point and its a source, so yes, point source absolute, but its nothing we can reproduce using tiny artifical point light sources.
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