Sunlight should make it grow. Flourescent wont do anything.
Indoor fluorescent light is not as bright as sunlight, and it is usually not exactly the same color (although there are different types of fluorescent tubes that produce different colors, some of which are extremely close to sunlight).
Colors may appear brighter and cooler under fluorescent light indoors, as fluorescent light emits a bluish light which can affect color perception. Outdoors in sunlight, colors appear more natural and vibrant, as sunlight provides a full spectrum of light that accurately represents colors.
Yes of course, that is why they are fluorescent.
The moon is neither fluorescent nor incandescent. It merely reflects sunlight.
Plants can benefit from fluorescent light because it provides a source of artificial light that can help them with photosynthesis, growth, and overall health. Fluorescent light emits the right spectrum of light that plants need for their growth and development, making it an effective alternative to natural sunlight for indoor plants or in areas with limited sunlight.
yes becase it is not that strong to to help it grow Black light is, essentially, another form of UVA light, similar to fluorescent light which isn't so different from natural "white" sunlight. Theoretically it shouldn't affect it too much, but I also know that chlorophyll (the material that makes plants appear green) is at least partially fluorescent, and supposedly it glows red under black light with the right conditions. I've never personally seen a plant grown only with black light, but if anything it would change the color, not the actual ability to grow.
Neither incandescent nor fluorescent lamps can provide light exactly similar to natural sunlight. However, fluorescent lamps are closer in color temperature to natural sunlight compared to incandescent lamps. LED lamps with a color temperature of around 5000-6500K are the closest artificial option to mimic natural sunlight.
Black light emits ultraviolet (UV) light, so it typically excites fluorescent materials that absorb UV light and re-emit visible light. Fluorescent colors that appear bright under black light include neon colors like pink, green, orange, and yellow. Other colors without fluorescent properties may appear muted or black under black light.
From Wikipedia: "About a third of all diamonds will glow under ultraviolet light, usually a blue color which may be noticeable under a black light or strong sunlight." You can read more about this phenomenon, below.
Highlighters contain fluorescent compounds that can absorb ultraviolet light from a black light and re-emit it as visible light, creating the glowing effect. This phenomenon is called fluorescence, where certain molecules absorb light energy and then release it at a longer wavelength, making them appear to glow under black light.
It's a bulb with more blue light in it, to better match the light that natural sunlight emits.
Yes, bleach does glow under a black light because it contains fluorescent molecules that become visible when exposed to ultraviolet light. This effect is often used in crime scene investigations to detect blood stains that have been cleaned with bleach.