Like one person answered, the sun provides ALL of the spectrum. What some don't know is that some plants need more of some colors and some more of other colors. Depending on if you want more foliage or fruit. Some plants do better in the sun since this is the natural. But, if you can increase the color of light that plants need for the foliage, you can increase the amount of growth.
Again, this isn’t always the situation, but sometimes it is.
bwg
2007-03-11 10:24:00
·
answer #1
·
answered by Bates Water Gardens 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
I'm going to go against the the majority here and declare artificial light the winner. It's much easier to control a bulb than the sun, just try to turn the sun on and off with a switch. Contrary to popular belief the sun does not have a true full spectrum. Our sun is one of billions and billions of stars each with its own unique spectrum of light, ask an astronomer. Sunlight has its own unique gaps in its spectrum but many forms of artificial light fill these gaps in natural light. Whether or not plants benefit from these unfamiliar wavelengths is not fully understood. Pot, cucumbers and tomatoes have been bred that grow better in artificial light than sunlight. RScott
2007-03-09 02:03:52
·
answer #2
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Sunlight is full spectrum, artificial is not. You can grow plants under total artificial light but to get the best results you have to use special expensive artificial lights that provide as much spectrum as possible. These kind of lights are super bright and use lots of electricity - you may have seen them in a hydroponics store.
I have some veggie plants that I start indoors before planting outside in the summer. I grow them under regular flourescent bulbs (one cool spectrum and and one warm). This provides enough light to start my seedlings and grow for a little while (one or two months) but if I leave them there longer, they are poor producers and get all tall and "leggy". Some plants such as african violets and certain others do okay in these conditions but most really like the sun.
Depends on what you want to grow.
2007-03-07 15:12:10
·
answer #3
·
answered by April 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
Natural light.
http://www.waynesthisandthat.com/fluorescent.html
2007-03-07 12:27:52
·
answer #4
·
answered by hopflower 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
it particularly is complicated to run a stable try to administration all the variables. it is why a stable administration is often needed. the easy answer on your question is that a greater robust candle-potential of light is translated as extra effective expenses of photosynthesis, and consequently production of glucose, optimal ideal to production of needed growth materials. whether, i ought to desire to argue that the one hundred watt comfortable ***if the warmth temperature output*** replaced into no longer controlled, extra approximately an advance in temperature of the plant shrink than it, and particularly some biochemical reactions take place quicker at extra effective temperatures, consequently the extra perfect growth fee of the plant. as surprising, i ought to ask no count variety if the 60 watt and one hundred watt bulbs had an same shade wavelength outputs (they gained't). Photosynthesis works optimal perfect shrink than particular comfortable wavelengths. the ambiguity of analyzing your consequences is by skill of utilising no longer controlling all the components of the try. i ought to bypass with the main important advice of extra effective quantity of potential falling on the plant at one hundred watts translating into extra effective glucose production, yet element out out of control variables and decision concepts that ought to, or won't make contributions additionally to the outcomes.
2016-11-23 14:18:34
·
answer #5
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
all plants do better in natural sunlight!
2007-03-07 13:22:24
·
answer #6
·
answered by cyndi b 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
HELLO?? Sunlight! It's NATURAL! Dumb question.
2007-03-07 15:08:55
·
answer #7
·
answered by Redawg J 4
·
0⤊
0⤋