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3 answers

Are you trying to approximate how pollinators see the colors of flowers? Many flowers have "guide lines" or "nectar guides" which show a pollinator where to get nectar. These are ultraviolet and show up to, say, a bee looking for nectar. If you put certain flowers under black lights, you'll see what insects see when they look at flowers.

As far as the other lights...get different lights and check! Candles are a warm, flickery yellow, incandescent bulbs are yellowish (but not as warm as candles), and fluorescent bulbs are kind of a greenish-whitish-bluish color (ugly!) None of them provide the best light for growing plants (which grow the flowers)--they need some form of sunlight, or "grow lights", which approximate UV light. I mean, if they need light to grow.

2007-01-20 08:30:47 · answer #1 · answered by SlowClap 6 · 0 0

All these different lights have a different colour. Some yellow some pinkish etc.

If the light is a different colour, coloured objects illuminated by that light will look different.

Blue cars under sodium lighting look black, because there is no blue light to reflect.

2007-01-20 06:46:02 · answer #2 · answered by efes_haze 5 · 0 0

your eyes seem to alter hues reckoning on the size of your scholars. in the event that they are smaller, you will discover greater or the coloured element of your eye (the iris), subsequently making them seem lighter or brighter. in the adventure that your scholars are super, the coloured section you spot is smaller and giving your eyes an basic darker visual charm. additionally, the iris's of your eyes are translucent, easy passes by using them very corresponding to it does a marble so confident, if the easy is shining by using them they're going to seem ligher ..in simple terms approximately illuminated. particularly besides

2016-12-12 16:04:46 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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