Nothing will happen to the rest of the lights if they are connected in paralell. If they are connected in series when one light is broken all of the lights go out.
If you mean Christmas lights; that was before. Nowadays Christmas lights are connected in parallel.
street lights are connected in parallel mostly because if any lamp stops glowing but the other lamps continue their glow
Overhead lights are typically connected in parallel. If they were connected in series, then, if one light went out, all of the lights would go out. Think of Christmas lights, they are connected in series. When one of the lights burns out, the whole string of lights goes out.
The "broken" bulb opens the circuit so no current will flow and none of the lights in series will light up.CommentIt's also worth pointing out that this situation represents a possible shock hazard, as the full supply voltage will appear across the break!
only two connections are possible.. parallel connection is always desired than series. .
Parallel connections will draw more current than equivalent lights connected in series, so the parallel configuration will be brighter.
No. They are connected in parallel with each other.
House lights are wired in parallel. If they were in series, when one burned out, all would. Christmas lights are wired in a combination of series and parallel - roughly 50 lights in each series string. that's why if one bulb burns out, a section of the lights goes out.
A parallel circuit. All the lights are connected in parallel across the power source.
on applying same power the one which glows brighter is the one connected in parallel connection.
With series Christmas lights, if one burns out, the whole string stops working. With parallel Christmas lights one light burning out only affects that light. This makes it much easier to replace burned out lights in the case of the parallel lights.
one light will still be going