1. Light and Life   (8/8)

Experiment: Determine the 1% depth

Problem: You want to determine at what depth there is still enough light for primary production. Therefore you are diving with an irradiance meter, which measures the downwelling irradiance at wavelengths in the visible light (400-700 nm). Because you have no oxygen tank, you can operate the instrument to a depth of only 2 m. However, you want to determine the depth with 1% of the surface irradiance (≅ depth of euphotic zone).

Just below the surface you measure 100% irradiance (W m-2), at 1 m depth only 53% and at 2 m depth only 30% is left.

Question: Sketch the irradiance profile on the linear scale (left), then on the log scale (right).

Answer

Question: How deep is the euphotic zone?

Answer


Lambert-Beer's Law

You just derived Lambert-Beer's law, an empirical relationship that relates the absorption of light to the properties of the material through which the light is travelling and presumes that attenuation of sunlight in water is an exponential function of water depth.

Lambert-Beer's Law
European Directives


Light and life: You now learnt about the role of light in water.

  • The concepts behind transparency and attenuation have been presented together with satellite-based maps of these parameters.
  • From these maps a link was made to safety (for the Bathing Water Directive an underwater minimum visibility is required).
  • Another link was made to growth in particular the available light for algae and water plants to grow.
  • The major sources for attenuation (suspended sediment in the near coastal zone and algae in the clearer waters) are presented.