Those visible light boundaries are fuzzy as it's very individualized - it's not a hard cutoff as in eg a responsivity chart for an InGaAs detector or something. Analogy would be boundaries of audible frequencies for humans - children commonly hear 15kHz+ but adults don't. I'm also a "real scientist" who is looking at ways to possibly wor…
Those visible light boundaries are fuzzy as it's very individualized - it's not a hard cutoff as in eg a responsivity chart for an InGaAs detector or something. Analogy would be boundaries of audible frequencies for humans - children commonly hear 15kHz+ but adults don't. I'm also a "real scientist" who is looking at ways to possibly work more or partner with you - I think it's criminal that the indoor lighting used (not to mention the constant sitting) is supposed to be somehow conducive to clear thinking and decision making. Thankfully my workplace has abundant natural light and outdoors space, but that's extremely rare - spent my PhD in a basement dungeon basically.
Those visible light boundaries are fuzzy as it's very individualized - it's not a hard cutoff as in eg a responsivity chart for an InGaAs detector or something. Analogy would be boundaries of audible frequencies for humans - children commonly hear 15kHz+ but adults don't. I'm also a "real scientist" who is looking at ways to possibly work more or partner with you - I think it's criminal that the indoor lighting used (not to mention the constant sitting) is supposed to be somehow conducive to clear thinking and decision making. Thankfully my workplace has abundant natural light and outdoors space, but that's extremely rare - spent my PhD in a basement dungeon basically.