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They still hallucinate but not as bad as they were a few years ago.I was chatting with an AI for the first time last night/early morning.
It lied once and then misrepresented itself once. It will confess if cornered but explains it away.![]()
Interesting, yea the male would more than likely go back to vegging.After asking about trying to grow the male in normal sunlight on the window ledge with sunlight lasting about 13.5 hours ATM and getting longer by mid June using my areas postal code it finally agreed that I have a 50/50’ish chance it will continue to flower.![]()
it's being snarky, lol.I found it’s last reply to my thumbs up amusing.View attachment 96901
I mean, I figured billions or trillions, but sextillion photons?1. Efficiency (Photosynthetic Photon Efficacy - PPE):
2. Power:
- High-performance LED grow lights typically have an efficiency in the range of 2.5 to 3.5 µmol/Joule. This means for every Joule of electrical energy consumed, the light produces 2.5 to 3.5 micromoles of photons in the PAR (Photosynthetically Active Radiation) range.
3. Photosynthetic Photon Flux (PPF):
- A 1000-watt LED grow light consumes 1000 Joules of energy per second (since 1 Watt = 1 Joule/second).
This means the light is emitting between 2500 and 3500 micromoles of photons per second in the PAR range.
- Lower end: 1000 J/s * 2.5 µmol/J = 2500 µmol/s
- Higher end: 1000 J/s * 3.5 µmol/J = 3500 µmol/s
4. Converting Micromoles to Number of Photons:
Therefore, 1 µmol of photons = (6.022 x 10^23 photons/mole) * (10^-6 mole/µmol) = 6.022 x 10^17 photons/µmol.
- 1 mole of photons = approximately 6.022 x 10^23 photons (Avogadro's number).
- 1 micromole (µmol) = 10^-6 moles.
5. Total Number of Photons per Second:
Conclusion:
- Lower end: 2500 µmol/s * 6.022 x 10^17 photons/µmol = 15055 x 10^17 photons/s = 1.5055 x 10^21 photons per second
- Higher end: 3500 µmol/s * 6.022 x 10^17 photons/µmol = 21077 x 10^17 photons/s = 2.1077 x 10^21 photons per second
You are correct, the number of photons is indeed very large. My initial quick comparison to trillions was an underestimation of the magnitude.
The emission rate for a 1000-watt high-performance LED grow light is in the order of 1.5 to 2.1 x 10^21 photons per second.
To put that in perspective with your scales:
So, we are talking about approximately 1.5 to 2.1 sextillion photons per second.
- 1 billion = 1 x 10^9
- 1 trillion = 1 x 10^12
- 1 sextillion = 1 x 10^21
Thank you for prompting me to double-check! It's important to be accurate with these values.