Well... it will transport you into prehistoric times. YOu will find yourself carrying a club and eating woolly mammoths. Enjoy.
No. This is because of the glass.
Oh, dude, when you take the globe off a plasma ball, you're basically exposing the inner workings of the ball, like its electrodes and gases. The plasma inside needs the globe to contain and shape the electrical currents, so without it, the plasma just kinda fizzles out into the air. It's like taking the bun off a burger - sure, you can still eat it, but it's not as fun or contained.
A plasma ball loses its charge primarily through the process of ionization and discharge. When the high-voltage transformer stops supplying energy or if the glass is touched, the ionized gas inside can recombine, leading to a drop in the plasma's brightness and energy. Additionally, the glass surface can act as a dielectric, absorbing some energy and dissipating it as heat. Over time, the energy dissipates into the surrounding environment, causing the plasma to fade.
To make a tiny plasma ball, you can start by using a high-frequency, high-voltage power source, such as a Tesla coil. Place a small glass or acrylic sphere at the tip of the coil and adjust the frequency and voltage until a plasma discharge forms inside the sphere, creating a miniature plasma ball. Make sure to take appropriate safety precautions when working with high-voltage equipment.
The plasma ball contains a gas mixture, which is ionized by the high voltage applied to the glass sphere. The ionized gas creates plasma filaments that conduct electricity, allowing the energy to travel to the center of the sphere and interact with a light bulb placed there, causing it to light up.
Those Plasma Balls are really fascinating. There is a high voltage source attached to the inner ball that causes a current to flow to the nearest point with a lower voltage. The ball is filled with a gas that glows when it has electricity flowing through it. When nothing is touching the ball, the current just flows anywhere onto the ball. When you touch the ball, some of the current can flow through the glass and into you. Because your body is providing a place for the current to flow, the electricity keeps flowing and the lines of current can stay connected to the point on the ball that you are touching.
To shock someone with a plasma ball, simply touch the glass surface with your hand or a metal object. The electricity inside the ball will create a visible arc of light that will transfer a small static shock to the person touching it. Be cautious and avoid prolonged contact to prevent injury.
This is the first time someone mentions the plasma ball in the few years I been in wikianswers. I like this question because with the plasma ball we could see how Tesla conducted his experiments. Tesla invented the plasma lamp for his experiments with high frequency currents of electricity in a vacuum glass tube, scientifically called an "evacuated tube" The Plasma Ball or lamp was actually first named by Tesla as "an inert gas discharge tube" for a better description. He wanted better light bulbs and he created those as well.
A plasma ball, also known as a plasma globe, contains high-frequency alternating current which creates a glowing plasma discharge. The energy in a plasma ball is in the form of electrical energy that excites the gas inside the sphere, producing the colorful tendrils of light.
No, Nikola Tesla did not invent the plasma ball. The plasma ball was actually invented by Nikola's brother, Danelei Tesla, in 1894. Nikola Tesla did, however, work extensively with high-voltage and high-frequency phenomena related to plasma discharge.
A glass ball. Glass is a material that does not have elasticity like rubber, so when a glass ball is dropped, it will not bounce.
You can if the plasma is briht. The sun is a ball of plasma and all other plasmas must compete with it.