He did, but that is still 8 hours of peak lighting per day which is more than most people run.
That was the point I was trying to get at.
The whole purpose of the study was to determine when the peak production of zooxanthelle was, and the affect of light dependent and light independent reactions.
Basically, using the peak production time, while allowing the algae cells to essentially recharge. Thus, gaining two max growth periods in 24 hours.
I think only increasing the limiting factor helps. If phosphate is growth limiting increasing alkalinity over 7 will not help at all. Similar thing with some trace metals. The challenge is to find out what the limiting factor is.
I think a coral breeder might have the ideal setup and some interest in the results.

