Create Sunlight: Artificial Possibility?

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Artificially creating sunlight using multiple lamps is theoretically possible by combining various light sources rich in different wavelengths, such as blue, red, green, UV, and infrared. The concept involves using prisms to break down and recombine these lights into a single beam that mimics natural sunlight. Current technologies like quartz-tungsten lamps and solar simulators with Xenon arcs approach solar output but lack sufficient UV emission. Aquarium lighting is noted for its close approximation to full-spectrum light. Overall, while achieving perfect sunlight replication is challenging, advancements in lighting technology continue to improve the fidelity of artificial light sources.
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would it be possible to artificially create 'sunlight' by the use of several lamps? for instance a bulb/cfc rich in blue light, another rich in red light, one rich in green light, by the use of UVb/UVa lights and infrared lights, and then, by the means of deflecting the specific lights (after breaking the lights up through a prism), combining them through another prism into a single white light beam that resembles sunlight like a single artificial light source can't?
 
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I think it's possible. After all, sunlight is nothing but a kind of electromagnetic wave.
 
Quartz-tungsten lamps are pretty close to solar output, as measured by the color temperature. For higher-fidelity sources, "solar simulators" use Xenon arcs with some spectral filtering. Neither of these have much UV output, tho.
 
Take a look at some aquarium lighting, as they are very close to full spectrum lights.
 
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