LED Lighting vs. MH Lighting
LED Lighting vs. MH Lighting
Dear Forum,
I am new here, and am looking to help design custom LED lighting for reef aquariums. I've been reading through the literature on metal halide lamps and have been a bit confused by some things I was hoping someone might be able to clear up.
One is why people say that 20,000K is the closest to natural sunlight. This seems very strange to me because the sun is actually a blackbody with a temperature of approximately 6500K.
Additionally, from looking at the spectrum for metal halide bulbs, such as this one:
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/File:Metal_Halide_Lamp_Spectrum.jpg
it looks as if the output has many sharp peaks from specific atomic transitions which should be pretty annoying, and also that if they are actually peaking in the blue, they will emit a huge amount of UV light that would be extremely dangerous. A blackbody at 20,000K has a peak emission frequency of only 140nm while anything under 400nm is considered to be dangerous UV. 140nm is actually well beyond the range which causes skin cancer readily.
Can someone explain what it is that is actually desired in a spectrum for a reef tank? I can't imagine you actually want much UV because it's too dangerous to have in such high intensities indoors. Besides, a simple purple or blue should be sufficient for most fluorescence in the reef, and you almost want more of a yellow for photosynthetic efficiency in terrestrial plants. Are corals that much different in the color of light that their chlorophyll is looking for?
Anyway, any pointers would be helpful. My goal is to produce cheap LED lighting custom for some friend's fish tanks, and possibly to sell in small quantities to other people if there was interest. I think based on everything that I know about fluorescence and biology that LED lights would be a lot more efficient both photosynthetically and in terms of producing safe fluorescent light, but if I'm wrong I'd rather know sooner than later so I can tell my friends to just use MH bulbs!
Also, are MH bulbs very good when it comes to dimming? My initial plan is to make 10,000 lumen LED lamps in a 5500K white with a sharp peak at 440nm, but they would be dimmable all the way down to 100 lumens.
Best wishes and happy new year!
Brian Neltner