40lm per watt, not good at all![]()
well it doesnt really matter it would be important if you were lighting up a warehouse but here its secondary,PAR is important here,anyone have access to a PAR METER?
40lm per watt, not good at all![]()
so, PAR is usefull light for Photosynthsis AND Flux the brightness?
And where does UV come into this equation? Most light fittings have UV filters. Corals use zooxanthellae to protect themselves from UV. Is there an equation to measure the UV from PAR & LUX ?
I must just point out that when measuring lumens, the commercially available light meters use a standard curve which focusses on the usable visible light range, peaking at roughly 6000k and dropping off on either side of this. Don't be fooled by led lightings low lumens per watt, it's not that they are poor light sources, it's that their light output spectrum is concentrated at the low points of the measured curve and thus get low readings.
When talking about PAR, this is referenced to land based plants and not to organisms which have evolved to live under a filter which allows mostly the blue's through.
LED's certainly are a future possibility, and with their usage in vehicle lighting increasing it can only mean higher powers and lower prices so I'm holding thumbs.