Total Internal Reflection
Total Internal Reflection
Here’s a good rule of thumb. Measure your tank from front to back. Divide that distance by 4. Mount your MH bulb at least that distance above the water. For example, if your tank is 24†from front to back, your MH bulb should be 6†or more above the water’s surface.
Below that height, some of your light will strike that water at greater than 60 degrees from vertical and pass through the upper portion of your tank. To insure total internal reflection (TIR), your bulb needs to be above that height.
You can easily tell if the MH bulb is too low. You will see “glitter lines†on the floor if the MH is the only light in the room. Commonly, you will see glitter lines on the floor next to the side of your tank. If you also see them on the floor in front of your tank, raise your lights.
You should mount your bulb higher until it begins to shoot over the tank rim and light up your room. Recessing a bulb inside a big reflector (Lumenarcs) helps to direct light into your tank even when the fixture is raised higher.
As for the inverse square law (1/r^2), it does apply to a MH bulb but not to its reflected light. Good parabolic reflectors reflect light rays that are almost parallel to each other. For tube lighting, the inverse law (1/r) is more appropriate. Individual tube reflectors will direct much of the reflected light downwards.
Dispersion is less when light enters the water. When the rays strike the water, they are bent closer to vertical so most of the light is refracted straight down.