Environment Control in Biology
Online ISSN : 2185-1018
Print ISSN : 0582-4087
ISSN-L : 0582-4087
Biological Studies on Light Quality in Environment Control
II. Biological Spectrograph: With Special Reference to Operational Characteristics of the Instrument
Tsuyoshi MATSUIIchiro AIGAHiromi EGUCHIFumio ASAKAWA
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

1971 Volume 9 Issue 3-4 Pages 29-37

Details
Abstract
1. A grating spectroirradiater (biological spectrograph) was designed and assembled for use in monochromatic light irradiation experiments on relatively large biological specimens, i. e. higher plants, in a controlled environment.
2. A short-arc xenon lamp (6.5 kW) was used as the light source. The dispersing element was a plane diffraction grating with a ruled area of 154×206 mm (1, 200 lines/mm, blazed at 600 nm) . The usable wavelength region was extended from 350 nm to 800 nm. A monochromator of the MONK-GILLIESON Mount type was used to obtain monochromatic light flux at as high an energy level as possible. Maximum intensity of the flux was 20, 000 erg/cm2/sec.
When entrance and exit slit widths were set at 0.5 mm and 5 mm, respectively, the half bandwidth of monochromatic light was 0.95 nm at 398 nm and 2.4 nm at 791 nm.
3. To simultaneously irradiate each specimen with monochromatic light beams of the same intensity and the same spectral bandwidth, relationships between the entrance slit width and exit slit widths, and the distance between the exit slit and specimen were examined. Conditions for setting them at appropriate values were studied.
4. To make the intensity distribution of monochromatic light on the irradiation plane uniform, a dispersing mirror composed of small convex mirrors arranged on a concave surface was contrived.
5. Stray light in the monochromatic light as measured with a double beam spectroradiometer was less than 10-5.
6. Air temperature and relative humidity in the laboratory were controlled in ranges of 15°C-30°C±1°C and at 65%±5%, respectively.
Content from these authors
© Japanese Society of Agricultural, Biological and Environmental Engineers and Scientists
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top