LOL, bonz.... if wood absorbed light it would be ..... well .. black...
here's something simple.. the brighter the wood appears, the more light it is reflecting. I wasn't saying the wood has anything to do with my yields, but the only reason we see anything is because light is being reflected from is surface. (thats why plants are green... they do not absorb the wavelength from green light and therefore reflect it, so you see a plant as green.
wood is the same, if you are looking at a piece of wood that is light colored or tan, it is reflecting that wavelength of light... not absorbing it.
Sorry to be the first to tell you this in 20 years.
Plants don't absorb "very, very small" amounts of green light. Look at that chart above and you can see roughly what the numbers actually are. Some plants, such as purple basil, can absorb green light better than other plants, such as sweet basil. Any photon in the PAR (about 400-700nm) range can be used for photosynthesisok, ok... it might absorb a little but a very very small amount... and it doesn't need it for photosynthesis. you can run a green light during a plants dark phase and not disrupt the hormone changes associated with the shortened day.
My point was that the light that we see from any object is the light that does not get absorbed (unless its emitting light). So if we are running a hps bulb, a white reflective surface would be just as effective as a yellowish hpsodiumish color. and under the hps light both would look the same. Its weird, under a small hps and some warm cfl's the wood "looks" like it could be white. if i stick a piece of white paper in front it also becomes yellow, just like the pine.
As for auxins.... green light is supposed to do what exactly?... Please explain what green light does for the plants hormone levels.
I use foil because its hard to get around here .......and no money....but i understand heat spots