yes you caan
No, copper wire cannot be used to make the filament of an electric bulb as copper wire has very low resistance. Therefore, the bulb will not glow if current is passed. It would also melt - the filament has to be white-hot to be any use!
This was called a filament and was found in older electric light bulbs.
filament
In an incandescent light bulb the wire that gives off the light is called the Filament.
filament
filament
As the name implies, support wires support the filament wire in the bulb, The filament, of course is the wire that glows white hot, giving out light
Its a coiled tungsten filament.
As the name implies, support wires support the filament wire in the bulb, The filament, of course is the wire that glows white hot, giving out light
As the name implies, support wires support the filament wire in the bulb, The filament, of course is the wire that glows white hot, giving out light
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.
If you are talking about an incandescent light bulb then its called a filament. It is thin so that it has a high level of resistance. Current going through the filament causes it to heat up and give off EM radiation in the spectrum of visible light.