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Kubelka Kubelka (1953)
New contributions to the optics of intensely light–scattering materials. Part II. Nonhomogeneous layersJ. Opt. Soc. Am., 44
Pukacki Pukacki, Giertych Giertych (1982)
Seasonal changes in light transmission by bud scales of spruce and pinePlanta, 154
T. Vogelmann, L. Björn (1983)
Response to directional light by leaves of a sun-tracking lupine (Lupinus Succulentus)Physiologia Plantarum, 59
M. Seyfried, E. Schäfer (1983)
Changes in the optical properties of cotyledons of Cucurbits pepo during the first seven days of their developmentPlant Cell and Environment, 6
L. Svaasand, R. Ellingsen (1983)
OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF HUMAN BRAINPhotochemistry and Photobiology, 38
L. Björn, Y. Suzuki, J. Nilsson (1963)
Influence of Wavelength on the Light Response of Excised Wheat RootsPhysiologia Plantarum, 16
J. Ramus (1978)
SEAWEED ANATOMY AND PHOTOSYNTHETIC PERFORMANCE: THE ECOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF LIGHT GUIGES, HETEROGENEOUS ABSORPTION AND MULTIPLE SCATTER 1 2Journal of Phycology, 14
C. Rupert, R. Latarjet (1978)
TOWARD A NOMENCLATURE AND DOSIMETRIC SCHEME APPLICABLE TO ALL RADIATIONSPhotochemistry and Photobiology, 28
Paul Kubelka (1948)
New Contributions to the Optics of Intensely Light-Scattering Materials. Part IJournal of the Optical Society of America, 38
D. Mandoli, W. Briggs (1982)
Optical properties of etiolated plant tissues.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 79 9
S. Lo (1984)
Optical dosimetry for direct and interstitial photoradiation therapy of malignant tumors.Progress in Clinical and Biological Research, 170
C. Bell, D. Rose (1981)
Light measurement and the terminology of lowPlant Cell and Environment, 4
A. Profio, D. Doiron (1981)
Dosimetry considerations in phototherapy.Medical physics, 8 2
Paul Kubelka (1954)
New contributions to the optics of intensely light-scattering materials.Journal of the Optical Society of America, 38 5
Lin Lin, Ehleringer Ehleringer (1983)
Epidermis effects on spectral properties of four herbaceous speciesPhysiol. Plant., 59
Z. Lin, J. Ehleringer (1983)
Epidermis effects on spectral properties of leaves of four herbaceous speciesPhysiologia Plantarum, 59
Eller Eller, Willi Willi (1977)
The significance of leaf pubescence for the absorption of global radiation by Tussilago farfara LOecologia, 29
M. Seyfried, L. Fukshansky (1983)
Light gradients in plant tissue.Applied optics, 22 9
A. Sanders (1985)
Optical radiation measurements : August 21-22, 1984, San Diego, California
Pukacki Pukacki, Giertych Giertych, Wladyslaw Wladyslaw (1980)
Light filtering function of bud scales in woody plantsPlanta, 150
D. Mandoli, W. Briggs (1982)
The photoperceptive sites and the function of tissue light‐piping in photomorphogenesis of etiolated oat seedlingsPlant Cell and Environment, 5
A method is described in which light gradients and spectral regime can be measured within plant tissue using fiber optics. A fiber optic probe was made by modifying a single optical fiber (200 μm diameter) so that it had a light harvesting end that was a truncated tip 20–70 μm in diameter. The probe was a directional sensor with a half‐band acceptance angle of 17–20°. Light measurements were made as the fiber optic probe was driven through plant tissue by a motorized micromanipulator, and the light that entered the fiber tip was piped to a spectroradiometer. By irradiating green leaf tissue of the succulent Crassula falcata L. with collimated light and inserting the probe from different directions, it was possible to measure light quality and quantity at different depths. Collimated light was scattered completely by the initial 1.0 mm of leaf tissue, which also greatly attenuated all light except the green and far‐red. Light scatter contributed significantly to light quantity and had a pronounced spectral structure. Immediately beneath the irradiated surface the amount of light at 550 nm was 1.2 times that of the incident light. The light gradient declined rapidly to 0.5 times incident light at 1.4 mm depth. In contrast, the amount of light at 750 nm increased during the initial 0.5 mm to 2.9 times incident light and then declined linearly to 0.5 times incident light at the dark side of the leaf (4.5 mm). The implications of the magnitude of the contribution of light scatter to the light gradient is also discussed.
Physiologia Plantarum – Wiley
Published: Mar 1, 1984
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