NO
The brightness of a light bulb directly has no direct relationship with magnets and wire. The bulbs brightness is determined by the wattage of the bulb. The higher the wattage of the bulb the brighter the bulbs light output.
A pencil has nothing to do with the brightness of a light bulb.
ANSWER: The brightness of both bulbs will decrease. If the bulbs are identical the current will decrease to 0.2 Amps. This is a simple series resistive circuit, the more bulbs you add in series both the amperage and bulb brightness will continue to go down.
Brightness is measured in lumens so the bulb has a brightness of 100 lumens. The electrical power the bulb uses is measured in watts. The efficiency of a bulb is expressed in the number of lumens produced per watt of electric power.
lumen
yes it can be powered by a potato:)
The brightness of a light bulb directly has no direct relationship with magnets and wire. The bulbs brightness is determined by the wattage of the bulb. The higher the wattage of the bulb the brighter the bulbs light output.
if light is low it can cuase the bulb brightnees.
You alter the brightness of a bulb by changing the voltage or frequency that is applied to the bulb.
A pencil has nothing to do with the brightness of a light bulb.
u see the light bulbs on a series circuit's brightness evolves and the brightness on a parallel's circuit dont
Shut up you fat monkey
brightness
If the bulb is of the incandescent variety, then reducing the current in the circuit will do this.
If the current is stronger then the bulb will be brighter.
The brightness of a bulb would not change if you added a second bulb in parallel with the first.Unless, of course, the increased current exceeded the power supply's capacity causing a reduction in voltage.
It can, but it should not. If it does, then the reed-switch is defective ... its contacts have most likely deteriorated on account of excessive current at some time.