The filament is made of tungten and these 'wires' (filament) conduct electricity.
5
it come from the energy source in the middle of the light bulb he clearly asked what type of energy is it?!
(Assuming you're asking about a light bulb.) No (By the way, you should specify what kind of bulb, and you need an indefinate article, such as "a" or "an" before your noun (which in this case is bulb) in this sentence.)
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.
If someone only connect one of the wires to the bulb holder, the circuit will be open and the lamp will not light. This is the same principal that a switch in the circuit does. It opens and closes the circuit.
Make a circuit with 2 wires a batery and a light bulb and touch wire to medle on light bulb
by shorter wires or thiker wires
No. Or at least not perceptually. The wires only supply electricity to the bulb - the bulb is what limits the current.
Perhaps by unscrewing the bulb light.
As the name implies, support wires support the filament wire in the bulb, The filament, of course is the wire that glows white hot, giving out light
As the name implies, support wires support the filament wire in the bulb, The filament, of course is the wire that glows white hot, giving out light
u need a battery 2 wires and a light bulb. Step 1. Get the 2 wires and connect them to the battery step 2. connect the other side at the bottom of the light bulb the light bulb should light if it doesn't :(
u need a battery 2 wires and a light bulb. Step 1. Get the 2 wires and connect them to the battery step 2. connect the other side at the bottom of the light bulb the light bulb should light if it doesn't :(
Burned out exterior bulb
If there is a bulb, it should work.
Electricity goes through the "electrical foot contact", heats up the wires (connected to the tungsten filament) therefore lighting the light bulb up. The filament is supported by wires. The glass mount holds up the two wires connected to the filament. That is how I think the light bulb works. Have a look.
The parts of a light bulb are the glass envelope, mixture of inert gases at a lower pressure, and a screw cap. Inside of the light bulb is the coiled tungsten filament, support wires, glass fuse enclosure, connecting wires, and the electrical contact.