Go ahead and search out some 96W 10,000K bulbs - I think you'll find some very different spectrums (among the few vendors that post spectral information) as some of these are made for planted tanks and some are for corals.
I'd post links, but it has been a year or two since I did it...
The coral friendly bulbs look very blue, because something like 90% of their output is at wavelengths <400nm, and their CRI is <60. The plant friendly versions have a big spike at a much lower wavelength (700nm area) to complement the blue spike (also centered at a slightly lower wavelength than the coral bulb's blue spike). The result is a much whiter appearing bulb (also blue, but a "washed out" looking blue), that also happens to have a 10,000K rating.
Ideally, bulb manufacturers would include PAR, CRI and a picture of the spectrum on the side of every tube's package along with a K rating.
I'd post links, but it has been a year or two since I did it...
The coral friendly bulbs look very blue, because something like 90% of their output is at wavelengths <400nm, and their CRI is <60. The plant friendly versions have a big spike at a much lower wavelength (700nm area) to complement the blue spike (also centered at a slightly lower wavelength than the coral bulb's blue spike). The result is a much whiter appearing bulb (also blue, but a "washed out" looking blue), that also happens to have a 10,000K rating.
Ideally, bulb manufacturers would include PAR, CRI and a picture of the spectrum on the side of every tube's package along with a K rating.