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This depends on the bulb design. A simple tungsten filament bulb might have a surface temperature of the bulb well above 100 C. A fluorescent lamp will be much cooler for the same light output.
About the same as a 100 watt incandescent light bulb.
Very little, but it is noticeable, with a bright light in a small room. A light bulb puts out between 9 watts (energy-saving fluorescent light bulb) to approximately 100 watts (bright incandescent light bulb). Your average bar-heater, for comparison, puts out about between 1200-2400 watts.
Because to much electricity is getting through to the light bulb.
Actually if you microwave a small bulb that does not resist high temperature it explodes in about one minute or something. If not it will do awesome colors, but it will finish by blowing up, taking much time
The quantity of power consumed by a light bulb is dependant on the wattage of the bulb.
the main reason for a light bulb to break is, the light bulb heats the tungstin wire. When the tungstin wire gets heated to much it breaks, causing thi light bulb to stop working.
It depends on the thermometer that you are using.
The average lifetime of an incandescent bulb is around 2000 hours.
No, Colored light bulbs holds the same amount of energy a regular light bulb holds.
The filament of a light bulb overs enough resistance to current flow, that the filament heats up so much that it will glow and produce visible light.
18,000 J