Finding Green Light Wavelengths for Dissertation

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the challenges of identifying the specific green light wavelengths emitted by a bulb for a dissertation project. The original poster seeks to determine if a green bulb emits light predominantly around 520-560 nm, while excluding other wavelengths. Responses suggest using a spectrometer to analyze the bulb's output, but the poster lacks access to such equipment and is on a limited budget. Alternatives like using filters or specialized LED lights are mentioned, but the effectiveness of these solutions is uncertain without precise specifications. Ultimately, the conversation highlights the difficulty of obtaining accurate wavelength information without proper testing tools.
Ballo
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Hi sorry if this is very basic, I am an animal final year student and have come across a problem for my dissertation. I am looking at wavelength of light. Now the question, is a green bulb purely giving off green light, ie if it more blue green is it giving of predonimantly light of around 500 nm where as 560 nm equals a darker green. I need as close to 520-560 as possible while excluding as much as possible of other wavelengths. I thank you for your help in advance
 
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Ballo said:
Hi sorry if this is very basic, I am an animal final year student and have come across a problem for my dissertation. I am looking at wavelength of light. Now the question, is a green bulb purely giving off green light, ie if it more blue green is it giving of predonimantly light of around 500 nm where as 560 nm equals a darker green. I need as close to 520-560 as possible while excluding as much as possible of other wavelengths. I thank you for your help in advance

There is no way to answer this since you have not provided more info on your "green bulb". We have no way of knowing the specs of the light source. Did you buy something off the shelf at a hardware store, or is this a $10,000 piece of light source with a monochrometer?

Pass the light through a spectrometer and look at the spread in wavelength. That should tell you off the bat the bandwidth.

Zz.
 
You will need to test the bulb in question, either using your own spectrometer, or from the manufacturer's specifications. You may also want to look into LED's, there are several different kinds that emit in the green range. But with the narrow band you want I suspect that you would need some heavy filters even with a green LED.
 
Hi, thanks for the replies. I don't have a spectrometer and was hoping for an off the shelf answer as I am on a very limited budget. Would photographers do a filter that could narrow down enough or is there any other answer, even a paint that could be put on a bulb. I was hoping it would be as easy as an ultra violet light to purchase. I know it all a bit vague but I can't go into to much detail without giving the game away.

Manufacturuers don't tend to put much detail on the bulb.
 
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