The color of a light does affect a plants growth. Plants absorb certain colors of light better than others, and, essentially, the more light a plant can absorb, the more it can grow.
Yes, the color of light affect the growth of the mongo and any other green plant. This is because some colors of the light, e.g. blue light, do not support photosynthesis.
Light, water, carbon dioxide.
Yeast require an assimilable nitrogen source for growth and urea is one of the chemicals yeast can use for this purpose. It contains more nitrogen than Di Ammonium Phosphate (used extensively by winemakers) but is less popular due to its links with the production of urethane during fermentation. A lack of assimilable nitrogen will inhibit yeast growth. Excess nitrogen will not compensate for a lack of other nutrients. As a guide 300mg/L of Yeast Assimilable Nitrogen Content (YANC) is recommended for successful fermentation, but it does depend on the yeast strain.
intensity duration quality
Yes.
does the amount of light affect mold growth?
My guess would be that osmotic concentration of the sugar gets so great that the yeast is unable to get enough water for growth.
Directly regulated by sugar and salt. Sugar cuases yeast growth, salt slows. Environmental factors such as moisture, heat and acidity also affect yeast growth.
the color of light does affect plants growth because the plant absorbs certain types of wavelengths of light
the color of light does affect plants growth because the plant absorbs certain types of wavelengths of light
Yeast need warm temperatures in order to grow. The perfect temperature for yeast is about 110 degrees F. Yeast will not start to reproduce and rise without warm temperatures to activate it.
temperature (30 degrees celcius is the optimum temp for yeast growth), nutrients (e.g. sucrose, fructose, glucose, lactose - (does not affect yeast growth), pH level (5 - 6 is the optimum pH level for growth)
sun light
yes
The color of a light does affect a plants growth. Plants absorb certain colors of light better than others, and, essentially, the more light a plant can absorb, the more it can grow.