Login

|
|
Why does chlorophyll always fluoresce in red?Moderator: BioTeam
5 posts • Page 1 of 1
Why does chlorophyll always fluoresce in red?Regardless of the color of the light, chlorophyll always fluoresce red light.
I think I understand the basic principles of fluorescence, but I dont understand why it always is red light from chlorophyll. Is there any easy explanation to this that even I understand? Thanks
think of it like this: a change machine converts a dollar bill to a quarter, and keeps 75% of the money. every time you put a dollar bill, you get a quarter. Now if you throw a whole bunch of different bills at the machine, only the 1 dollar bills will make a difference, and it will always give out quarters. Chlorophyll only absorbs a certain wavelength (in the UV spectrum if I am not mistaken) and gives out red.
"I have no intention of stopping anytime soon. I want to understand the universe and answer the big questions, that is what keeps me going" - Stephen Hawking
Re: Why does chlorophyll always fluoresce in red?as miloshic said chlorophil a absorves in red and blue. Blue light is much more energetic than red, so when a blue photon strikes the chlorophil, it change from a basal state to a very excited state. To get to a lowest excited state it loses energy by heat. When striked by a red photon, chlorophil changes to that lower excited state and to get to the basal state it looses energy by re-emitting red photons.
Thats why chlorophil a always fluoresce on red...
5 posts • Page 1 of 1
Who is onlineUsers browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests |
© Biology-Online.org. All Rights Reserved. Register | Login | About Us | Contact Us | Link to Us | Disclaimer & Privacy
Science Network - Braintrack.com - University Directory | Chemicool.com - Chemistry | Logo design by LogoBee | Powered by phpBB