I have a question for a scientist who actually knows about light / solar radiation:
My friend has a coral farm in Sydney in a glass house. The light that originally came into the greenhouse through the clear roof was absolutely off the charts, far too intense for corals that are used to living in aquariums lit by artificial light. The current solution has been to paint white lime on the glass to block and defuse some of the light and this is working fine but we were wondering if it would be more beneficial to cover the glass roof in some kind of actinic blue film. and this leads me to my actual question:
Would such a film be blocking other colours in the light spectrum allowing more in the actinic range to get to the corals, or does the blue film actually absorb the blue spectrum, which is why it appears blue to our eyes?
I would be interested to hear from anyone with natural light aquarium experience or a background in this kind of thing.
My friend has a coral farm in Sydney in a glass house. The light that originally came into the greenhouse through the clear roof was absolutely off the charts, far too intense for corals that are used to living in aquariums lit by artificial light. The current solution has been to paint white lime on the glass to block and defuse some of the light and this is working fine but we were wondering if it would be more beneficial to cover the glass roof in some kind of actinic blue film. and this leads me to my actual question:
Would such a film be blocking other colours in the light spectrum allowing more in the actinic range to get to the corals, or does the blue film actually absorb the blue spectrum, which is why it appears blue to our eyes?
I would be interested to hear from anyone with natural light aquarium experience or a background in this kind of thing.