Whoa there fellow light geeks
I picked up on this technology a few years ago following several technology conferences and it has fantastic potential.
A few observations:
We tend to run bulbs in the blue spectrum. This does three noteable things:
- Reduces intensity
- Highlights particular coral pigment (for our eyes only)
- Keeps us away from the spectrum which is really good at growing algae (more red).
Additional Thoughts:
This light appears to the eyes to change spectrum based on intensity. I do not know if this is a true spectrum shift as everything appears "whiter" the brighter you get regardless.
The spectrum analysis provided shows these bulbs have a very different spectrum than our beloved 10-14K bulbs with an odd drop in the 450nm range while overall having a broad even spectrum which peaks just prior to moving red.
I think aestheticaly this could be a fantastic light for naturalists.
Spectrum adulterers should be looking into the potential manipulation of spectrum and or bulbs with specialized spectrums. Since the techy in the video noted the spectrum is largely a result of the obsurd heat intensity at its core perhaps dimming is a potential tool depending on aquarium depth ect.
With intensity to spare I would be interested less in a Top down reflector and more intereted in redirecting the dispersion of light up/out,sideways ect.
Good stuff..
Oh and dont get excited based on Corraline growth. That stuff will grow under a mini flashlight
![Wink ;) ;)](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7)