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 will get brighter
It doesn't matter where the bulb is in respect to the battery, as long as the circuit is complete, the bulb will light up.
If the voltage is appropriate, the bulb will shine.
the bulb will glow and ammeter will show the reading
Disconnecting a wire from a battery would break the circuit. If the battery was powering a bulb, the lamp would go out.
Nothing happens at all, unless there is a complete conducting path back to the battery's positive side. Once you have that, current will flow, and the light bulb may light up.
because when you connect the both end of the battery to the same battery terminal, it is called a parallel connection, therefore when it's parallel connection the ampere rating of the battery increases, so it's enough that would able to light up the bulb,. .hope my answer would help,. hehehe^_^
When a battery is connected to a light bulb, the electrical current flows from the battery through the wire, causing the filament in the light bulb to heat up and emit light. The battery acts as a power source, providing the necessary voltage and current to illuminate the bulb.
Yes; the current will be zero, because--as described--the wires are not connected in such a manner as to create a circuit.
what is a conclusion for a battery powered light bulb
To light a bulb using a battery, you need to connect the battery terminals to the bulb's terminals using conductive wires. The positive terminal of the battery connects to one terminal of the bulb, while the negative terminal connects to the other terminal of the bulb. This creates a complete circuit, allowing electrical current to flow and illuminating the bulb. Make sure the bulb is compatible with the battery voltage to ensure proper functionality.
The battery life (assuming it is a primary cell) is determined by the Ampere-hour drawn from it. You cannot connect a 3.5V bulb directly to a 9V battery. The bulb will fuse.