this thread has good stuff in it too:
https://www.rollitup.org/advanced-m...40388-phytochrome-infrared-interaction-2.html although their focus seems to be on infrared energy (heat) which is usually a PROBLEM for indoor gardens, so i don't understand why they'd want to add more infrared light. if the room is hot, it's full of infrared energy.
i'm focusing on the spectrums available at dusk (/dawn?). but, some very relevant info is in this thread
SgtPeppr,
To answer why a higher temperature might work is this: Infra-red light is beyond the human visible spectrum, but not a plants. All energy is in wavelengths, even light energy which is considered a photon, both a particle and a wavelength simoultaneously. What plants "see" as far-red or infrared, we "feel" as heat. It is both technically and essentially identical. We can only feel infra red because our eyes are not adept to the wavelengths in that spectrum, but phytochrome "sees" infrared in the same way it does red. The presence of red light will convert phytochrome to the Pfr form, which in itself triggers other auxins, but not the one in question. Florigen is the hormone for flowering and is triggered by critical amounts of Pr, that is when we turn the lights off there is no more red light to make Pfr, but there will always be infrared light in the form of what we call heat. So all the Pfr converts to Pr and triggers florigen to starts flowering the plant. Where we as guerrilla/indoor/outdoor grower's can go with this information is very limited because of our resources. We can't play with cannabis genetically but we can see the effects of our actions. What would a temperature of 5 degrees higher with a lower relative humidity at night in the flowering room do? What could we deduce from an infrared scan of a flowering room in the day vs in the night? What would it reveal about the amount of heat dispersed in the room? These things I want to know.
EDIT:
after reading through that thread and some other shi online, heres what i think is up (mad rep to kief reefer is he's still around):
the phytochromes (light absorbing substances of the plant) Pr and Pfr are affected by far-red light. They're actually the same thing; but red light changes Pr into Pfr and far-red/infrared(heat) light changes Pfr into Pr.
At night, Pfr slowly changes back into Pr, because the only energy present is infrared (and far-red at dusk).
Pr is more responsible for actually triggering flowering, Pfr is more of the plant's clock, it's always running. Higher levels of Pr stimulate flowering sooner each day and with more vigor.
The conversion from Pfr to Pr happens every night, regardless of veg/bud cycle. More Pfr converts to Pr the longer your dark period is (the longer less red light hits the plant).
A low-k incandescent bulb up high right at "dusk" would help kickstart the conversion of Pfr in Pr, because the energy is mostly far-red and not red-red. after two hours (real dusk length) you can turn the lights off, and let the conversion occur on its own.
That's what I think I've gotten out of this so far.
phytochrome/pr/pfr info:
http://www.mobot.org/jwcross/duckweed/phytochrome.htm