The bulb and the filament are the two main components of an incandescent light bulb.
There are numerous elements that are used in making a light bulb. Some of these elements are tungsten, Mercury, argon, and various members of the element group known as halogens.
Yes, eventually. The components of the light itself are only designed to handle the heat of the 45 watt bulb. The extra heat from the 60 watt bulb would eventually damage parts of the light, including the wires.
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Light bulb provide electrical light.
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.
It would not be dangerous to leave a light bulb partially unscrewed, however, there is some possibility that it will fall out of the socket. I would advise that if you don't want the bulb to be on, and you don't have a light switch, unscrew the bulb completely and put it away until you need it.
You need a Battery, Light Bulb, Ammeter, Switch.
You need a Battery, Light Bulb, Ammeter, Switch.
To make a simple series circuit to light a bulb, the simplest components are a power source (such as a battery); a switch (to turn the power on or off); the bulb (obviously !); and some wires to connect everything together.
A battery, a light bulb and a switch
It has components that are arranged end to end in order to produce light.
Yes, eventually. The components of the light itself are only designed to handle the heat of the 45 watt bulb. The extra heat from the 60 watt bulb would eventually damage parts of the light, including the wires.
It is because there is a light bulb and things like that......
The other components are still connected to the circuit
Artificial light.
Some do, some do not.
brightness
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