AquariusPanta
Well-Known Member
It's gotta be pie from the sky...The answer to the quiz ?
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It's gotta be pie from the sky...The answer to the quiz ?
( )
It is why it was not an argument. It is a fact of science. The idea is not correct and there is no argument about it. So, you saying clearly it is an argument is the only argument here.A discussion can hold an argument/point (or two) from multiple parties/individuals, hence "my discussion point is that the phrase about green penetrating the canopy to benefit the lower leaves is not correct.". That is clearly an argument.
Discussions can be informative like this one when multiple thoughts about a subject, such as light absorbance, take place because discrepancies typically pop up due to misunderstandings. Thankfully for us, someone usually holds the facts needed to bring the audience into a new discussion, therefore paving a way of better understanding for all.
Mostly water fluid in eye ball.It's gotta be pie from the sky...
Eeew, you drink eyes?How come ,all of us -the human individuals - have the same -highest- sensitivity at the green photons ?
Tip:
What is inside the eyeball,between the retina and the cornea ?
Void space ?
Air ?
Or.... ?
(Difficulty level : Easy as drinking a glass of ...hmm... water ! )
LOL!
Cheers.
I believe you and a few others held differing views on page one of this thread, which is the root of my questioning and explaining.It is why it was not an argument. It is a fact of science. The idea is not correct and there is no argument about it. So, you saying clearly it is an argument is the only argument here.
I know. Not an argument. The argument was from those that were wrong. We can argue over the meaning of facts. But the facts are the facts.I believe you and a few others held differing views on page one of this thread, which is the root of my questioning and explaining.
Are you watching Helix? Eyeballs stew.
Look,Doer...http://pcp.oxfordjournals.org/content/50/4/684.short
Because green light can penetrate further into the leaf than red or blue light, in strong white light, any additional green light absorbed by the lower chloroplasts (In that leaf...doer) would increase leaf photosynthesis to a greater extent than would additional red or blue light.
So, if someone would like to discuss with me the idea of green light penetrating through the leaves would have to show a peer reviewed study to counter this one.
And it is still not an argument. It is still the discussion of Botany.
If you want to throw in unsubstantiated myth and marketing claims then someone else can argue about that.
No,you 're wrong.I know. Not an argument. The argument was from those that were wrong. We can argue over the meaning of facts. But the facts are the facts.
And I see RIU as Myth Ridden. And that's fine. But, now we have more research. And some of the myths are just plain wrong...not all of them. This Green Penetration is part of the defoliation Myth. Which in turn comes from the most backward idea that the upper leaves are "blocking light" from the lower leaves.
And what happened here, was I refuse to walk eggs shells around Marketing Hype.
And Green Penetration, ie you need green is all mix up in LED.
This thread is about Red and Blue ratio. And I countered with explaining COBs.
That brought up Green Penetration hype as a benefit to lower leaves.
So. it isn't.
I am for spread spectrum white light not discrete nano-meter emitters for just this reason. HYPE.
@Positivity seems to think so. He's been saying that he's noticed better results with 660nm + warm white over warm white alone.So question. Would it be worth while to add 620nm and 660nm red LED's alongside softly driven cobs? I'm thinking 4000k cobs with a few reds thrown in?
Added reds should aid in biomass and essential oil production.So question. Would it be worth while to add 620nm and 660nm red LED's alongside softly driven cobs? I'm thinking 4000k cobs with a few reds thrown in?
That pic is from an "Indiana Jones " movie .Are you watching Helix? Eyeballs stew.
Biomass yes,"essential oil " (terpenes ,you mean probably),allow me to think not that much .Added reds should aid in biomass and essential oil production.
Here,I've to disagree with you brother.@Positivity seems to think so. He's been saying that he's noticed better results with 660nm + warm white over warm white alone.
I have a feeling that 660nm would benefit veg more than flowering, but that's based on a guess based on how I understand phytochromes, not experiment.
The reason I think it would be better for veg is because there's less need for transmittance to the lower branches, no need to calibrate shade avoidance, and a higher %Pfr in general would mean less stretch, and more "active state" growth. (contrary to believe that red contributes to stretch, which goes against phytochrome theory)