Thank you stringjunky
I don't as yet understand the diagram, but thatss why I am here, to learn.
I think I have gone from newspapers to trees now:D some trees are taller than others and think that without light non of them would grow, so each tree has different needs for life to survive, from a daisy to a mighty oak, if we take the "popular" google answer of a bright sunny day being 10,000 lumens (which is probably very debateable) as a base.. then a daisy on the ground is pretty happy with the 10,000 lumens it recieves, so would a tree, say 15ft tall survive on the same intensity of light or has it increased, if so how do we calculate that increase, is there some law that can explain this?
Also if for instance aeroplanes had some sort of greenhouse on them.. would the daisy survive the light intensity at 35,000 ft? or would it be considerable more than what it is genetically programmed to do, (in my garden the biggest daisy is just under 2 inches (have not switched to metric yet, its an age thing )
The more and more I think of the sun as a giver of life, the more and more I am getting curious about it.
Although science fiction, there was a star trek film where they had this amazing forest onboard another star ship, the "genesis" project it was called in the film, maybe one day all this will be possible and already thinking about a place in cornwall the eden project? who i think use artificial light to mimmick the sun.
thank you once again for the reply, it is very much appreciated.