Light

Background Information

Light units

Lumens is the total light that a bulb produces in all directions.

Lux is the Lumens that fall onto a particular area.

PAR is the Lux measured between wavelengths 400-700nm ( blue-red spectrum most used by plants).

Daily light integral is PAR integrated over the course of a day.

Sidenotes

These are simplified definitions.

Lumens is a weighted function centered around 550nm (green spectrum most visible by humans). Phone apps estimate this value using camera exposure (aperature and shutter speed).

PAR is evenly weighted across 400-700nm ( violet-red ). Newer PAR meters no longer cut off below 450nm or above 650nm.

However due to these wavelength differences any conversion between Lux and PAR can be off by orders of magnitude.

Sunlight is distributed evenly and the conversion is consistent. PAR = Lux*0.0185

Fluorescent lights have spikes at multiple wavelengths and the conversion is inconsistent: PAR = Lux*0.0135

LEDs are highly dependent on color and have the most inconsistent conversions. Blue LED: PAR = Lux*0.0222

Light levels

Full sun

Noon sun: 100,000 Lux = 2,000 PAR

Direct sunlight all day: 50 DLI

Partial sun:

Morning sun: 50,000 Lux = 1,000 PAR

Direct sunlight in the morning and afternoon, dappled sunlight during noon: 20 DLI

Dappled sun

Filtered sun: 20,000 Lux = 400 PAR

Filtered sunlight all day: 10 DLI

Shade

Indirect sun: 10,000 Lux = 200 PAR

Indirect sunlight all day: 5 DLI

Inside a well lit room

Well lit room: 1,000 Lux = 14 PAR

18 hours of 14 PAR: 0.8 DLI

Species Info

Full sun: 30-60 DLI

Pinus thunbergii (Pine)

Juniperus chinensis (Juniper)

Punica granatum (Pomegranate)

Partial sun: 20-30 DLI

Acer palmatum (Maple)

Prunus serrulata (Cherry Blosson)

Rhododendron indicum (Azalea)

Dappled sun: 10-20 DLI

Certain trees like Ficus will thrive above 30 DLI and lose leaves to survive below 20. Just because a tree is alive doesn't mean it's healthy.

Calculator

Method

Sun calculations use sun angle (altitude and azimuth), sun intensity, and atmosphere conditions.

Indoor calculations take into account window angle and building obstruction.

Bulb calculations assume 18 hours/day at a constant level. PAR measurements done with a full spectrum meter.

Notes

A sunlight to PAR conversion factor of Lux / 54 is used.

Incident surface angle is modeled as a "leaf" which will turn towards ideal light throughout the day.

References

Inspiration

Korczynski, P.M.; J. Logan; J.E. Faust (2002). "Mapping monthly distribution of daily light integrals across the contiguous United States". HortTechnology12:12−16.

http://horttech.ashspublications.org/content/12/1/12.full.pdf

Background Information

Sidenotes

Riddle, Dana (February 2013). "Aquarium Equipment: PAR Meters and LEDs - How Accurate are the Measurements? A Comparison of Three Meters and Lux to PAR Conversion Factors for LEDs". Advanced Aquarist.

http://www.advancedaquarist.com/2013/2/equipment

Light Levels

Light levels for growing orchids

http://www.orchidsusa.com/3Lightlevels.htm

Sun, Partial Sun / Partial Shade, Dappled Sun, Full Shade

http://gardeningwithconfidence.com/blog/2013/04/25/sun-part-sun-shade-part-shade/

Species Info

Torres, Ariana P.;Lopez, Roberto G. (2010). "Measuring Daily Light Integral in a Greenhouse". Purdue Extension,HO-238-W,pp.5-7

https://www.extension.purdue.edu/extmedia/ho/ho-238-w.pdf

Evergreen Tree Species Guide

Ford, John; Ticknor, Robert L. (1983). "Evergreen Trees and how to use them in your garden". Golden Press,pp.60-62

Bonsai Empire tree species guide

http://www.bonsaiempire.com/tree-species

bonsai4me tree species guide

http://www.bonsai4me.com/species_guide.html

Calculator

Sun Angle

Sun angle provided by the SunCalc.net project

https://github.com/mourner/suncalc

Tested against US Navy Observatory azimuth and altitude calculator

http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/AltAz.php

Sun Intensity

Hourly sun intensity data from the National Solar Radiation Database provided by National Renewable Energy Laboratory

http://rredc.nrel.gov/solar/old_data/nsrdb/1961-1990/hourly/

Amosphere conditions

Daily weather condition data from the National Solar Radiation Database provided by National Renewable Energy Laboratory

http://rredc.nrel.gov/solar/old_data/nsrdb/1961-1990/dsf/

Losses due to atmosphere scattering

Losses calculated with equations and coefficients from Perez et al.

Perez,R.; Ineichen,P.; Seals,R.; Michalsky,J.; Stewart,R. (1990). "Modeling Daylight Availability and Irradiance Components from Direct and Global Irradiance".Solar Energy,44(5),pp.271-289.

http://www.physics.arizona.edu/~cronin/Solar/References/Shade%20effects/sdarticle%20(24).pdf

Incidence angle equation

Light angles calculated with 3D incidence angle equation from PVWatts Version 1 Technical Reference (2013) published by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.

http://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy14osti/60272.pdf

Tested against incidence angle from National Renewable Energy Laboratory's Measurement and Instrumentation Data Center Solar Position Calculator.

https://www.nrel.gov/midc/solpos/spa.html

Direct beam radiation, sky radiation, and ground reflected radiation

Calculations follow the outline provided by Solar Radiation Data Manual for Buildings

http://rredc.nrel.gov/solar/pubs/bluebook/appendix.html

Tested against Monthly Solar Radiation and Illuminance for North, South, East, West, and Horizontal surfaces.

http://rredc.nrel.gov/solar/old_data/nsrdb/1961-1990/bluebook/state.html