PAR

PAR (Photosynthetically Active Radiation) is the range of light wavelengths β€” from 400 nm (violet) to 700 nm (red) β€” that plants can use for photosynthesis. PAR is not a unit of measurement but a defined spectral range. The intensity of PAR light at a surface is measured in PPFD (Β΅mol/mΒ²/s). Understanding PAR is fundamental to evaluating grow lights, because light outside the PAR range (UV, far-red, infrared) is not used for photosynthesis in the same way.

Key Facts

  • PAR range: 400–700 nm β€” visible light that drives photosynthesis
  • Blue light (400–500 nm): promotes compact vegetative growth and chlorophyll synthesis
  • Red light (600–700 nm): drives photosynthesis most efficiently; promotes flowering
  • Green light (500–600 nm): partially absorbed by plants; penetrates deeper into canopy
  • Far-red (700–800 nm): not classic PAR, but triggers shade avoidance and the Emerson effect
  • Lux and lumens measure light as perceived by the human eye β€” irrelevant for plant growth

Related Terms

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