Someone is welcome to add more detail or corrections for my PAR numbers, but here's an interesting comparison.
From the number (and link) in post
#247, 350 PAR is about 17% of peak direct sunlight - which I understand to be about 2000 PAR at sea level.
This percentage isn't completely surprising if you have been paying attention to lux measuring.
130,000 lux is peak direct sunlight
as I understand it. 17% of that is about 22000 lux - or about regular full daylight levels.
So corals are best-adapted to regular full daylight. It took all of science and a new unit of light measurement (PAR) to figure that out? Huh.
This is why (again, repeat) measuring in lux is fine for us.
All we really have to do is make sure we're around the full-daylight range....and probably make sure we don't get too close to direct sunlight numbers. This is a lightweight task that is not a problem to do with a lux meter. The correct range is very wide, so additional accuracy isn't really needed.
-Matt
P.S. FWIW, Dana says "300 PAR" as well as "400 PAR or less", instead of 350 PAR as the ideal peak for corals in this article:
Feature Article: Imitating Natural Light Quality, Intensity, and Dosage in a Reef Aquarium - Do We Really Want To? ? Advanced Aquarist | Aquarist Magazine and Blog Not a huge discrepancy, but might give the idea that there's a range rather than just one correct number.