Time for a physics lesson. The foot candle is a light intensity measurement, not a light flux measurement. So if you take a light meter and measure the light to take a picture, you only care what the light is while the shutter is open, not what it is seconds before or after. In the case of using flash it might be near totally dark before and after the flash.
So it makes sense that keeping your plant in darkness except to flash it once a day won't work no matter how many foot candles you flash it with. Also foot candle says nothing about the wavelengths of the light measured. You can illuminate a plant with green monochromatic light as much as you wish without good results because plants are green since they reflect (rather than use) green light.
One has to make some basic assumptions in order to use such a basic number. First assumption is that the foot candle recommendation assumes a day length...say 10 -14 hours of light at that intensity. Second assumption is that it is sunlight (full spectrum) white light or at least an an acceptable substitute for that.
So when you use foot candle, you are assuming the reader knows that means for a reasonable time approximating day length and and an acceptable spectrum for chlorophyll absorption.
In short you are saying this light intensity for a day and with a full spectrum of wave lengths. Think about it.
BTW...you can use this to your advantage by supplying less than desirable foot candles for longer periods, but there are some limits to this. Plants need a period of darkness.
Last edited by goodgollymissmolly; 07-04-2010 at 07:01 AM..
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