No. The light bulb is two words, not a combination of light and bulb.
Certain light bulbs are gas filled. Consider Xenon and Neon bulbs. The ideal for a filament bulb is to use a vacuum bulb, however, inert gases can also be used. The point is to avoid the rapid oxidation that occurs at high temperatures in the presence of air.
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.
The kind of gas that is in a light bulb is called Argon.
Depends which kind of lightbulb. Incandescent light bulbs are not filled with gas. Energy saving lightbulbs may be filled with a range of gases. These include Neon, Phosphorus and Fluorine.
Inert gases.
Light bulb is filled with inert gas or simply a vacuum.
heat up and glow
Light bulb is filled with inert gas or simply a vacuum.
None, the inside is a vacuum.
argon and xenon i think
A light bulb has one of these three gases Neon Argon or maybe Nitrogen.
yes there is in the spiral energy saving light bulbs there is mercury
When electric current flows through filament of the bulb, the electrons are squased among themselves due to the thin structure of the bulb. This causes them to emit light. Due to the gases filled in the light bulb, the bulb glows.
Light bulbs are filled up by Neon or Argon gases, because they are inert.
Make a circuit with 2 wires a batery and a light bulb and touch wire to medle on light bulb
The globe is the outer glass shell. The shaped coil inside is the filament. Wires and the stem support the filament inside the bulb. There are gases within the light bulb to prevent it from burning out. And the base is to securely support the bulb.