huh? no, of course not!
When a bulb is attached to a battery or a cell as scientists call it, the bulb glows. If you want a bulb to glow more and more brighter, it depends on how many batteries you attached to the bulb. If you attach a lot of batteries at the same time, the bulb might even explode or burn out. The wires that hold the interaction between a light bulb and the battery is electricity. The electricity flows through the wires and touches the bulb and that is how a light bulb glows.
The bulb glows continuously probably, because the circuit it is installed in, is in the closed position.
no current
The thin wire in an electric bulb that glows is called a filament. It is typically made of tungsten and glows when electricity passes through it, producing light.
the filament
yes, there is a gas in a light bulb you energise it and it glows.
The filament is the small coil that glows when the bulb is on. I believe its made out of tungsten
A voltage is applied across the terminals of the light fixture to which the bulb is attached by two terminals, hot and neutral. A current then flows through the bulb. In an incandescent light the filament wire heats up and glows.
The bulb glows dimly when current is passed through a vinegar solution because the small number of ions in the vinegar solution move through the filament of the bulb.
The bulb that glows brightly likely has a higher current passing through it compared to the dim bulb. This could be due to differences in resistance, voltage, or power ratings of the two bulbs.
The supporting metals are insulated from the current path and current cannot flow.
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.