Luminescence
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.
This light bulb does not produce heat and that is why it is given that name
yes, 4x more
Draw a battery and light bulb. Draw a line from the smaller connector on the battery to the bottom of the light bulb, this is positive on both. Draw a line from the bigger connector on the battery to the side of the light bulb,'this is the negative of both. Looked all over and can't seem to find this one.
No, a higher wattage INCANDESCENT light bulb uses more current than a lower wattage INCANDESCENT light bulb. Some CF and LED bulbs are rated by the amount of light that an incandescent bulb would produce, but they are also rated by the wattage that they use.
A light bulb similar to a heater in that they both produce heat when in operation.
A light bulb uses electrical energy, and produces light, as well as heat.
both use an electric current running through a material that somewhat conducts electricity to produce heat, and the light bulb also uses it to make light
It is the extremely thin wire inside the bulb. It is so thin that when the electricity goes through produce light, when that filament breaks the bulb is not good.
they produce protons and electrons they are collition then the light produce and heat produce
light energy
The light bulb is inside the lamp base, right?so, when you turn on the lamp, the light shines THROUGH the lamp base, although dimmer, so you can se both. if you took the lamp base off, the light bulb would look brighter.
You do not. CO2 has nothing to do with the creation of a light bulb. A typical incandescent bulb has a vacuum inside. No light bulb uses CO2.
because it produce light in the night
The purpose of a lightbulb is to produce light.
A bulb is like Sun because both Sun and light bulb provide light
the filament