TxOld Dude
Dazed and confused
In fact photons are different between themselves, they can carry different amount of energy.
The manifestation of those differences are what we percieve as colors. "Blue photons" have more energy than "red photons" and the PAR is a term describing the energies(colors) needed by plants to make photosynthesys. Led lights have better efficency in terms of emission of selected wavelenghts(=colors, energy) than hids.
@pop22
If you find it, please post the link, I'm pretty sceptic about that one. Thanx
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That involves wave-particle duality physics. More than I want to get into!

For other folks info:
Photons don't just go for a bit then stop unless they are stopped by something in their way. LED vs HID or any other, it's the volume of photons involved and the amount that are directed to a specific point in space. PAR measures the volume of photons within a specific range of frequencies from 400nm-700nm. If you were to have the same exact LED at the same distance and change the lens from 30 degrees to 45 degrees the PAR would fall off and vice versa from 45 to 30 the PAR would increase.
Re: Penetration
Figure it like this:
Even though water is a poor analogy, it serves the purpose best...
Take garden hose with a twist type spray head. Turn it on just enough for a mist and aim it at a shrub for 30 seconds.The surface of the shrub gets wet but the interior stays dry. Now, don't change the opening on the head but turn up the pressure at the valve. As pressure increases, the volume exiting the hose increase as well and now the mist penetrates deeper into the shrub because more volume is applied within the same time frame.
Like I said, not the best analogy, but for illustration it works. The same is said for electricity when applied to a bulb. At a lower electrical pressure (voltage) the bulb is lit but dim. Increase the voltage and the bulb gets brighter; more photons are excited and exit the filament in the bulb. Efficiency (luminous efficacy) is how many photons (intensity) vs. electrical pressure applied/used. HID uses gases and elements like sodium that when excited emit photons, but require a high electrical pressure (voltage) to do it, therefore not very efficient. LEDs use elements like gallium arsenide and gallium nitride to emit photons with substantially less electrical pressure (3v or so) and heat from the excitation to achieve the same volume of photons.
I guess the point is that the capacity of the material to emit photons at a desired volume and the voltage necessary to achieve excitation is what determines the best "delivery system".
Florescents: Not much bang for the buck. Requires a ballast to step up the pressure. Low excitation and photon volume at the specified voltage due to the chemical used in the tube (low-pressure mercury vapor). Low photon volume=low penetration (remember the shrub?).
HID: Requires a ballast to step up the pressure. Better output due to the chemicals (sodium bromide or iodide) ability to emit more photons than fluorescent. But uses lots of power and generates lots of heat doing it.
Plasma: Florescents on steroids.
LED: Best bang for the buck due to lower power requirements and better efficiency. Still have a ways to go on grow lamps though, I think. It seems they are still missing something. Hard for the "regular" grower to compare HID to LED as regards to efficiency and power usage as LEDs are rated in PAR while HID and everything else is still rated in lumens. A common comparative needs to be instituted to make it easier for the non-techy to determine how LEDs equate to everything else non-LED.
Just my 50 cents...
Fish
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