CONCLUSION

                The hypothesis was partially correct.  The plants that grew under sunlight were the healthiest, but they didn’t grow the fastest.  Sunlight is made up of the perfect balance of light colours.  On the downside, these plants were the shortest.  Yet they were the darkest and had the most number of leaves.  Fluorescent light was the second best choice of lighting for the two types of bean plants.  Plants that grew under the fluorescent tube were the second highest, second darkest, and had the second most number of leaves.  One should note that fluorescent lighting is also more efficient that incandescent lighting.  Incandescent lighting is the worst of the three types of lighting that were used.  Even though the plants that grew under incandescent light were the tallest, they had the least number of leaves, and were the least dark.

                While the experiments were conducted, plants that grew under sunlight were the shortest yet the healthiest.  They were short because they grew slower than the other plants.  This occurred because the plants that grew under sunlight received light with lower levels of light quantity, i.e. light intensity.  Another factor that accounted for the slow growth rate of these plants was the temperature.  Increasing the temperature will, up to a certain point, increase the plant’s capacity of photosynthetic activity.  Since sunlight already contributes to the temperature of the earth, it does not raise room temperature.  Given time, these plants would have been the tallest of the different types of plants too.

                The plants that grew under fluorescent light grew the second best.  They weren’t as dark as the plants that grew under sunlight but darker than the plants that grew under the incandescent bulb.  It was the second tallest, had the second most number of leaves, and the second darkest.  It had many leaves because cool fluorescent tubes produce a significant amount of light form the blue/indigo end of spectrum.  Unfortunately, fluorescent tubes do produce some waste heat, which contributed to a faster rate of evaporation.  It was noticed that the cotton that the seeds were planted in was usually dry when it was watering time.  The piece of cotton that was placed under sunlight was usually damp at the end of the day.  On the other hand, the piece of cotton that was placed under an incandescent tube was extremely dry, without the tiniest bit of moisture in it.

                Of all the types of lighting used, incandescent is, with no doubt, the very worst.  The plants that grew under the incandescent bulb were the least healthy.  They were a pale white-green colour, signifying a low number of chlorophyll cells.  To top it off, incandescent bulbs are highly inefficient; they produce a considerable amount of waste heat and very little light for the amount of energy that is needed to make them run.  The plants that grew under the incandescent bulb grew the fastest because of the increase of temperature, which the incandescent light bulb created.  Light that comes from incandescent light bulbs has very little light from the blue/indigo end of the spectrum, which encourages foliage growth.  This is why the plants that grew under the incandescent bulb had so few leaves.  Nearing the end of the experiment, the heat that the incandescent bulb produced burned the edges of some of the stems and leaves.