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The principle behind those glowing orbs throughout your house is one of the most simplistic of science and circuitry. If you provide a source of energy to an able filament it will glow. Whether your source is the AC current running through your home or DC current provided by a battery, it will still yield the same result.
A source of electrons, a path, and something to use the electrons.
If someone only connect one of the wires to the bulb holder, the circuit will be open and the lamp will not light. This is the same principal that a switch in the circuit does. It opens and closes the circuit.
You take a wire and stick it to the positive end of the batter. Then connect another wire to the negative end of the battery. Connect both wires to the lightbulb.
You'll need two pieces of wire... and im pretty sure that if you take one end of the wire and put it on the very bottom of the light bulb and the other end of the wire and put it on the positive side of the battery, and take the other wire and put it on the threads of the light bulb and the other end of the wire and put that end on the negative side of the battery, you should get light. (I may have the polarities [positive & negative] mixed up).
To light a light bulb you need to connect to a source of electricity like a battery or an electrical outlet.
i will tell you how if you tell me what this project is called,it uses light bulb, copper wires,holder,6 volt battery.
The principle behind those glowing orbs throughout your house is one of the most simplistic of science and circuitry. If you provide a source of energy to an able filament it will glow. Whether your source is the AC current running through your home or DC current provided by a battery, it will still yield the same result.
an electric circuit consists of a voltage source (like a battery), something to use up some of the voltage to keep it from short circuiting ( like a light bulb or a motor), and wires to connect the positive end of the battery to the light bulb or other device, then more wire to connect the other part of the bulb to the negative end of the battery.
yes
A source of electrons, a path, and something to use the electrons.
If the voltage is appropriate, the bulb will shine.
If someone only connect one of the wires to the bulb holder, the circuit will be open and the lamp will not light. This is the same principal that a switch in the circuit does. It opens and closes the circuit.
series
Get your bulb, it should be a very small wattage (weak) one, get your battery and wires, connect one wire to plus side of abttery and other wire to minus side of battery, then connect to the bulb, you may have to play around a bit to find a connection that produces light.
Simply connect the -ve of the bulb to -ve of the battery and +ve of bulb to +ve of battery using an electrically conductive wire, the bulb will light automatically.
The battery life (assuming it is a primary cell) is determined by the Ampere-hour drawn from it. You cannot connect a 3.5V bulb directly to a 9V battery. The bulb will fuse.