like heck
A plant would not grow well under pure yellow light because it lacks certain wavelengths necessary for photosynthesis. Plants require a broader spectrum of light, including blue and red wavelengths, to efficiently carry out photosynthesis and promote healthy growth. Yellow light alone would not provide the necessary energy for plants to thrive.
Not well. The spectrum of light as well as the duration of day/night cycles trigger development and reproduction in plants.
A plant's growth under only yellow light would be limited because yellow light contains a narrow range of wavelengths that are not optimal for photosynthesis. Plants rely on a wider spectrum of light, including blue and red wavelengths, to drive photosynthesis effectively. Without these wavelengths, the plant's growth and development would be stunted.
Since yellow is only weakly absorbed by the pigments, the plant will grow slowly if at all. Violet, blue and some red light is most strongly absorb.
Most plant life needs full spectrum lighting. In early stages of a flowering plant, it would need a blue and green spectrum (achieved with usually metal halide light) and then switched over to a red and orange spectrum (using high pressure sodium lighting). Growing a plant under pure yellow light will most likely make the plant grow quickly, but wiry - the stem will get really long and the top of the plant will most likely fall over eventually). It depends on the plant. Pure yellow light uses the red/orange spectrum and cacti do well in this type of lighting. Houseplants (which prefer blue/green spectrum) would most likely do poorly in "pure yellow light".
Most plant life needs full spectrum lighting. In early stages of a flowering plant, it would need a blue and green spectrum (achieved with usually metal halide light) and then switched over to a red and orange spectrum (using high pressure sodium lighting). Growing a plant under pure yellow light will most likely make the plant grow quickly, but wiry - the stem will get really long and the top of the plant will most likely fall over eventually). It depends on the plant. Pure yellow light uses the red/orange spectrum and cacti do well in this type of lighting. Houseplants (which prefer blue/green spectrum) would most likely do poorly in "pure yellow light".
hey guys,how are u doing?i just wonder if i can use both of garnier pure light(the yellow one with pure lamon) and garnier pure 3 in 1?
Yellow is a primary colour. It is pure, and two colours cannot be mixed to make yellow.
This is one of the classic experiments carried out by Gregor Mendel. If you cross pure-breeding green pod plants with pure-breeding yellow pod plants the offspring (F1 generation) will all have green pods. This means that green pod is dominant and yellow pod is recessive. To explain the results, pure-breeding green pod plants must have the genotype GG (homozygous dominant) and yellow pod plants must be gg (homozygous recessive). When they are crossed the F1 offspring will receive a G allele from the green parent and a g allele from the yellow parent, so they will all have the genotype Gg ie they will be heterozygous.
Most plants will grow in white light, as it is closer to blue light. Blue light is the light emitted from the sun for the majority of the day. Green light has a very small place on the spectrum and therefore does not appear much. However, if the plant is hardy, it may grow in any light or even no light.
A substance that is pure yellow is one that reflects or emits light in the yellow part of the spectrum without any other colors mixed in. This means it appears as a consistent, uniform yellow color without any variations or impurities.
Because of the rich furtile soil, the rain and pure oxygen