this depends on 1. whether the extra bulbs are being connected in parallel circuit or in series with each other, and
2. the power rating of the battery.
supposing the battery power rating is greater than all the individual bulbs put together, the bulbs will glow the same maximum intensity if they are connected in parallel, and will become dimmer if connected end to end i.e in series.
As the lamps are identical, and all three draw a current of 6 A, then each lamp must be drawing 2 A. So, with one of the lamps disconnected, the current drawn from the supply will reduce to 4 A.
The current in a circuit, expressed in milliamperes, is1,000 x (battery or power supply voltage)/(resistance connected between the power supply terminals)If you increase the voltage of the battery or power supply, the current in the circuitincreases proportionally, at least until something in the circuit gets hot, melts, fuses,and opens the circuit.
The circuit will become an open circuit.
A lamp's rated power only applies when the lamp is supplied with its rated voltage. If you connect the lamps in series, with the same supply voltage, then the lamps are no longer subjected to their rated voltage and, so, will not operate at their rated power.
In a series circuit, all components gets the same amount of current passing through them.
The closer it gets to the battery te stronger it gets tambien if there us less bulbs the more it gets
As the lamps are identical, and all three draw a current of 6 A, then each lamp must be drawing 2 A. So, with one of the lamps disconnected, the current drawn from the supply will reduce to 4 A.
The current in a circuit, expressed in milliamperes, is1,000 x (battery or power supply voltage)/(resistance connected between the power supply terminals)If you increase the voltage of the battery or power supply, the current in the circuitincreases proportionally, at least until something in the circuit gets hot, melts, fuses,and opens the circuit.
wire a resistor across a battery. that is about as simple as it gets. the resistor could be an incandescent light bulb.
It will look dimmer and dimmer. Also, smaller and smaller (the angular diameter gets to be smaller and smaller).
It will look dimmer and dimmer. Also, smaller and smaller (the angular diameter gets to be smaller and smaller).
Ultraviolet light
The dimmer gets hot because it takes the extra voltage that isnt being sent to the lights and converts it to heat to dissipate it.
The current depends on what is connected to the battery's terminals. If nothing is connected to it, then there is no current, and the battery lasts quite a while. In general, the current is 1.5/resistance of the external circuit connected to the battery until that number gets too big, and then the voltage of the battery sags, because it can't deliver that much current.
The circuit will become an open circuit.
it doesn't, in a parallel circult the volage stays the same therefore the brightness will stay the same
A lamp's rated power only applies when the lamp is supplied with its rated voltage. If you connect the lamps in series, with the same supply voltage, then the lamps are no longer subjected to their rated voltage and, so, will not operate at their rated power.