The part of a light bulb that glows is called the filament. It is typically made of tungsten and emits light when an electrical current passes through it, heating it up to produce light.
Yes, a circuit is a part of a light bulb. It is designed to provide the necessary electrical connection for the bulb to receive power and emit light. Without the circuit, a light bulb would not be able to function properly.
Tube, bulb, envelope, globe.
The glowing part of an incandescent light bulb is the tungsten filament. When electricity passes through the filament, it heats up and emits light.
No, Thomas Edison did not invent the glass part of a light bulb. He is credited with creating the first practical and commercially successful electric light bulb in 1879, using a carbon filament inside a glass bulb. The glass part of the light bulb was typically made by glassblowers or other skilled artisans during that time.
In an incandescent light bulb this is the filament. It is usually made of tungsten.
the filament
It's the small coil of very fine tungsten wire that glows white hot.
In an old-fashioned light bulb, the part that emits light is a resistance. When current flows through it, it heats up so much that it glows - it emits light.Due to their lousy efficiency, these light bulbs should be discarded, in favor of fluorescent light bulbs or LED light bulbs.In an old-fashioned light bulb, the part that emits light is a resistance. When current flows through it, it heats up so much that it glows - it emits light.Due to their lousy efficiency, these light bulbs should be discarded, in favor of fluorescent light bulbs or LED light bulbs.In an old-fashioned light bulb, the part that emits light is a resistance. When current flows through it, it heats up so much that it glows - it emits light.Due to their lousy efficiency, these light bulbs should be discarded, in favor of fluorescent light bulbs or LED light bulbs.In an old-fashioned light bulb, the part that emits light is a resistance. When current flows through it, it heats up so much that it glows - it emits light.Due to their lousy efficiency, these light bulbs should be discarded, in favor of fluorescent light bulbs or LED light bulbs.
In an incandescent lamp, it is called a filament. It is usually made out of Tungsten. The resistance in the filament causes it to heat up, and then glow. In a neon lamp it is plasma, which is an ionized gas. In a fluorescent bulb mercury vapor is ionized to produce UV radiation, that hits the phosphor coating on the outside of the bulb and that glows.
Yes, a circuit is a part of a light bulb. It is designed to provide the necessary electrical connection for the bulb to receive power and emit light. Without the circuit, a light bulb would not be able to function properly.
"light bulb" is a noun.
the actual filament itself in a light bulb has the most resistance,this is why it glows and produces light,the rest of the bulb is sufficiently engineered to carry the voltage and current applied to it without producing too much heat.
Because it is made to do so. An incandescent light bulb glows because electricity heats the filament until it is very hot and excites the atoms so much they emit "black body" radiation, much of which is in the visible part of the spectrum.
no it is where the gray or black part at
Tube, bulb, envelope, globe.
The glowing part of an incandescent light bulb is the tungsten filament. When electricity passes through the filament, it heats up and emits light.
No, Thomas Edison did not invent the glass part of a light bulb. He is credited with creating the first practical and commercially successful electric light bulb in 1879, using a carbon filament inside a glass bulb. The glass part of the light bulb was typically made by glassblowers or other skilled artisans during that time.