When you turn it on, yes. The glowing electrical arcs contain plasma.
Oh, dude, when you take the globe off a plasma ball, you're basically exposing the inner workings of the ball, like its electrodes and gases. The plasma inside needs the globe to contain and shape the electrical currents, so without it, the plasma just kinda fizzles out into the air. It's like taking the bun off a burger - sure, you can still eat it, but it's not as fun or contained.
A plasma ball, also known as a plasma globe, contains high-frequency alternating current which creates a glowing plasma discharge. The energy in a plasma ball is in the form of electrical energy that excites the gas inside the sphere, producing the colorful tendrils of light.
No
no it cannot
The wire that lights up inside the globe is the filament.
One can find more information about plasma lights by going to the Instructables website. The website includes content about plasma globe tricks that are not commonly known.
the plasma .. :))
The outside of the original Globe Theatre looked very much like Sam Wanamaker's modern Globe theatre in Southwark. We don't know what the original Globe looked like inside. (The inside of the modern Globe is copied from some drawings we have of the inside of the Star - a slightly less famous Jacobean theatre).
A theatre
plasma can be found on any star really
Actually, it's not really snow. It's just plastic particles made to look like snow. Now that that's settled, They get the "snow" into the snow globe by putting it in water which is then inserted through a hole in the bottom of the globe. If you look at the bottom of your snow globe, there is most likely a hole with a stopper inside it:)
they aren't on the globe but inside the earth...... just kidding guys !