著者
Kazuhiro FUJIWARA Shunsuke KUBO Kensuke EIJIMA Ryo MATSUDA Akira YANO
出版者
The Society of Agricultural Meteorology of Japan
雑誌
農業気象 (ISSN:00218588)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.78, no.3, pp.101-112, 2022-07-10 (Released:2022-07-10)
参考文献数
26

We have improved a light-emitting diode artificial sunlight source system that we developed in 2013. The 2013 system can produce light with various spectral distributions for wavelengths of 380-940 nm that approximates those of ground-level sunlight and produce light with arbitrarily modified spectral distributions. Moreover, this system can produce time-varying light with different spectral distributions. However, this system’s utility is limited because the light it produces has low maximum irradiance and low time-stability for sunlight-effect research experiments. Hardware and software improvements to that system allow it to now produce a maximum irradiance of approximately 1.54 kW m-2 for 380-940 nm at a 7.1 cm2 light outlet with greater time stability and make it easier to produce time-varying light having a large number of different spectral distributions. First-step operational tests showed that this improved system can accurately produce single light with spectral irradiance distributions (SIDs) approximating: (1) SIDs of ground-level sunlight measured in Tokyo at two-hour intervals on a clear day; (2) various magnifications (1.33, 1.2, 1, 1/10, 1/100, and 1/1000 times) of a reference terrestrial solar SID, which is defined by the International Electrotechnical Commission; and (3) various geometric-shape SIDs as arbitrarily modified ones, except for a rectangular shape. For the second-step operational test, time-varying light with the three SIDs described above was produced in various sequences at three-second intervals. The third-step operational test verified the 30-min time stability of SID at the light outlet. Operational tests indicate that the improved system can facilitate various sunlight-effect research. Our improved system enables sunlight-effect research experiments that were previously impossible, such as investigations of naturally fluctuating sunlight effects on plant response, growth, and development. Moreover, experiments comparing the effects of ground-level sunlight spectral distribution and conventional artificial lamps on plant growth and development are now possible.