The circuit will be interrupted. There will be no closed path through which the current can flow.
To replace most front lightbulbs on 7 series, bumper has to be removed.
Yes. A typical light bulb socket is an open circuit when the bulb is removed, thus blocking the flow of current and turning off the remaining bulb. The removed bulb would go out too, of course. It is possible to imagine a bulb socket that reverts to a closed circuit when the bulb is removed. In that case, the remaining bulb would remain lit.
It will all just turn off. Because with a series circuit the power travels through each light bulb in a series (one after another) so if it is interrupted by there being a burned out or removed bulb, the circuit will not be complete and thus not work at all. If you want to see for yourself, most Christmas lights are series circuits, go ahead and take one out.
yes we can bulb placed in series with dc
Answer: it will burn out **Explain:**The same current flows through each part of a series circuit. If the circuit is broken at any point there won't be any current that will flow. In this case, if one of the bulbs blew out, the other bulb would not be able to light up because the flow of electric current would have been interrupted. #Carryonlearning
The bulb is dim.Because,the voltage is drops in series connection so you add more bulbs in series the last bulb got low voltage that reason for the bulb is dim
Loosening one bulb in a series circuit will break the circuit and cause all the bulbs to turn off. In a parallel circuit, loosening one bulb will not affect the other bulbs, and they will remain lit.
In a series circuit, if another bulb is added, it is going to dim.
The bulb that will glow first when 3 bulbs are connected in series and the switch is connected after 1 bulb is the second bulb in the series. The current flows through all the bulbs in a series circuit, but the second bulb experiences the full potential difference first as it is connected directly to the source.
If one light bulb in a series circuit fails, all the other light bulbs will go out, until the failed bulb is replaced and the series circuit is completed again.If one light bulb in a parallel circuit fails, all the other light bulbs will still work.
There is insufficient information in the question to answer it. In series with what? Please restate the question.
Removing a bulb - or opening the switch - breaks the flow of current in a series circuit.