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Only by being put in the furnace at a power plant, then it would help to light a whole region.
It would be more different since it will take up more power than the less efficient light bulb. Instead of using all the solar power it will probably need the forces of 2 energies to light the bulb.
If you are talking about batteries of different physical sizes but of the same voltage then the answer is yes. The light bulb requires a specific voltage to operate. As long as the batteries add up to the voltage that the bulb requires, the lamp will light properly. Larger batteries usually have a greater operational capacity. The load being of equal amperage draw, the D cell load will operate longer than a AAA cell load.
More watts means it uses more energy per second (watt is a unit of power). If it is a light-bulb of the same type of technology, the higher-watt light bulb would also give off more light.
110 volts is what comes out of an average wall socket in America. A 100-watt bulb would be powered by 110 volts. You need to be more specific in your question to get a good answer. Small can't be measured.
Yes, even a potato can light a light bulb. Yes. If the batteries match the voltage of the bulb, they can light it. Flashlights have bulbs and batteries that power them. If you mean a household light bulb, then you'd need many batteries in series (80 of the 1.5 volt batteries).
The job of a battery is to power the torch. if the circuit is not complete then the bulb wont light up and if the batteries arent the right way round the bulb wont light up either.
If the bulb is a 40 watt, 120v bulb, you would need 20 6 volt batteries wired in series, or 80 (!) 1.5 volt batteries. 1.5 volt batteries are AAA, AA, C, D, etc. Since this solution is rather extravagant, try finding a light bulb made for an RV. These typically run off of 12 volts, and you can get a single 12 volt battery, or 2 6 volt batteries, to run this bulb.
You dont need batteries to light a lightbulb!
If you add resistance to the circuit the bulb will shine with a fainter light ... the higher the resistance is the fainter it will shine
Because the bulb is blown, the batteries are flat/absent or there is a problem with the circuitry.
It's probably only a 1.2V LED. It just depends if the batteries are connected in series or parallel.
first of all, you need a bulb, a wire, and ONE light bulb. You clip the wire on the battery and touch the wire on the bottom of the light bulb
Electricity is passed through a wire from battery to bulb
yes
because it then is not generating electricity.
Generically, a power source (usually batteries), a light source (usually a light bulb), a switch to turn it on and off, and wiring of some sort to connect the energy source to the light source. Theoretically this is the minimum you would need to build a "flashlight".