viernes, 4 de noviembre de 2016

Plants/Leds/And winter stuff

This probably doesn't have a lot to do with the last publication or the fact that there hasn't been anything here for a super long time but I wanted to share a few things that I have learned as a novice Arduino enthusiast, an amateur lighting hobbyist and an absolute fool on growing plants. My suspicion was that I needed a special kind of light source for my plants and, o was I schooled on how to properly grow plants.

First let me explain the situation. This year and last I got the opportunity to grow a garden close to home. It was all happy and stuff until the fall and it really made me upset that some of our plants hadn't grown sufficiently. Our onions didn't for sure. So we decided to bring them inside during winter.

I thought now the problem of keeping them inside is primarily that they don't get much of the sun. At first I thought that just any light would do. It turns out that plants make their own food through photosynthesis which is a very complicated process, and among all those complications, they have the need for a particular part of the light spectrum.

Light spectrum over a gray background to reduce chromaticity distortion (Thanks, Wikimedia)
At this point I was like fine any white light contains a mix of all the colors in the spectrum but it turns out that all sources of light have a color temperature and that color temperature also determines "how much" of a color that white light has. That's especially important for photographers as the quality of the color in pictures is largely determined by the presence of the right amount of colors in the light that they have available. In polar coordinates it looks a little like this
It turns out that plants have a very marked preference for red light but according to this awesome USU paper. I also learned that a pinch of blue light is also very important for the plant's growth. So in other words the temperature of the light color determines how much red, green and blue the plants will get and you want them to get plenty of red and some blue. I mention temperature because the way we measure the color of something is by estimating how hot it would have to be to glow that bright, as a general rule of thumb the bluer the hotter the light is.

As a small side note if you have ever taken a chemistry class you always use the blue part of the flame because that is the hottest part (unless you are burning something with copper).

Then I decided that for my plants I would use a relatively "warm" light. I specifically went with 3500K LEDs that produce a spectrum similar to this one
It has a pretty nice yield of red but I added a little bit of blue through a blue component in RGB ring of LEDs.
So far it's working great and plants seem to be enjoying their artificial and ugly sun.

Hi from the happy plants

Thanks to Adafruit for the NeoPixel ring
Thanks to Wikimedia and my phone for the pictures (All CC BY-SA 3.0)
And thanks to USU for the great paper on blue light and plants!

sábado, 3 de agosto de 2013

What I have found in you.

I have found in you beauty, not just the glorious appearance that so graciously is yours; rather, I have found that beauty that crowns those who seek for the truth. The beauty in the hopeful eyes of the elderly; understanding that their masterwork is the person who they have become, and realize there is more to be done. The beauty in the dreams of a child that not understanding his present still dares to look to the future through a glimpse of pure faith. I have found the true reason for eternity. Because after being with you for a moment I will see once again that nothing, but eternity will suffice.
For you Jorri.

miércoles, 29 de junio de 2011

Promises, Promises

Quería contarles de algo interesante. Incubus siempre ha tenido miles de
razones para asombrarme. Pero hoy lo lograron hacer de nuevo. Ya hace
algunas semanas escribieron "Promises, promises", pero lo verdaderamente
genial de todo fue su idea de subirla a la web y organizar un concurso.
Cada persona tenía que hacer un cover y subirlo.
Además la partitura original fué subastada en ebay y las ganancias
fueron donadas a la cruz roja de Japón.Definitivamente, en mi humilde
opinión, este fué el mejor cover de Promises, Promises que se hizo.

lunes, 20 de junio de 2011

At some point

At some point we forget that sky is blue.
At some point we stop staring at the flowers.
At some point we avoid to feel the cold raindrops falling in our face.
At some point we let go too easy and try not to get attached too quick.
How to rediscover all that we are used to? How to embrace the joy of
childhood again? How to be tender in a raw and hopeless world? How to
become good friends when fate keeps us apart? How to look back and
regret not of what we've done? Future is built a brick at a time. But at
no point we should stop of building the masterpiece of our lives. Life
is always worth living, and not something worth suffering.
Oh the wonders hidden in the daily life.
Oh the bright morning right after the dark dawn.
Oh the stars shining in the lonely and cold night.
Oh the hopeful look of those too wise to feel too old.
Oh the innocent acts of those who have a world to discover.
What a beautiful thing is to see the small seed of faith to grow into a
marvelous tree. A tree that looks for the light in the sky.
And we came out of darkness.

Borodin - String Quartet #2 Mov III


"el diálogo interno de alguien quien ha sido tan amargamente asolado por la vida y el amor y quien por sobre su terrible sufrimiento debe seguir adelante... por amor. Oh la cruda y vulnerable existencia de lo que es el alma humana."

miércoles, 6 de abril de 2011

miércoles, 2 de febrero de 2011

little tricks

when watching something on the web (whatever it is it) it is stored for
a while on your pc so... it pretty much works on whatever thing you want
to download and it's "on the web", youtube videos, facebook pictures,
bla bla bla. If you're using firefox just go to the adress bar and type
'about:cache' and the directory that appears under disk cache device is
the one you need. Go there and there you go! (unfortunately under
windows you need to guess which one is your file (they're usually the
biggest). There's another little trick if it gets too big then it is
place under the temporary directory in linux is simple '/tmp', under
windows good luck! Here are a couple of "not downloadable pictures" hahaha

ok thanks to azarah Eells for being a good photographer and for her great site
Azarah Eells site

--
smile, tomorrow will be worse...