Nothing. All the light bulbs in your house are connected in parallel. In a parallel circuit the same voltage appears across all the loads, and the supply voltage is nearly constant, so if one bulb is switched off it makes no difference to the others.
it should become dimmer
That bulb goes out. The other bulbs remain on.
The whole circuit fails - because the action of the bulb blowing cuts the circuit.
Yes but very slightly,because temperature coefficient of bulb element is very low.
It will all just turn off. Because with a series circuit the power travels through each light bulb in a series (one after another) so if it is interrupted by there being a burned out or removed bulb, the circuit will not be complete and thus not work at all. If you want to see for yourself, most Christmas lights are series circuits, go ahead and take one out.
in a series circuit current flows through each resistor or light bulb and if one item burns out the complete circuit goes dead such were the old fashioned xmas tree lights. They were wire in series and if one light burned out you had to test each light bulb til you found the one burned out to get the whole string to work again. In a parallel circuit each resistor, motor, light bulb has its own ground so if you lost one light in a circuit the rest of them continue to burn.
The bulb becomes brighter unless it is too much till it shot-circuits.
because when u put the fuse u creat a circut enabeling power to get to the bulb the fuse is classed as circut breaker
Yes. A typical light bulb socket is an open circuit when the bulb is removed, thus blocking the flow of current and turning off the remaining bulb. The removed bulb would go out too, of course. It is possible to imagine a bulb socket that reverts to a closed circuit when the bulb is removed. In that case, the remaining bulb would remain lit.
the bulb is burnt out or the circut board is faulty. The circut board is a common failure in the older versions and was a safety warrant recall.
Because circuit don't break unlike in series.That means rest of the component are getting the voltage across them.
when a light bulb is switched on it will blown..............
Hi there, I also have a test coming up. The only thing I can think of is inputs! Sorry :( :(
The bulb will get brighter
what i believe is that they are both on a separate circut. same bulb yes but separate circut on a controller. i have the same problem right now and I'm not sure how to get it fixed by myself. i might take it to a repair place.
Might be a bulb is installed incorrectly or wrong bulb for socket or the bulb base is broken, causing a short. Or the socket is broken and a contact is shorted to ground. Get one of those circut breaker type fuses and do process of elimination one bulb at a time.
If the voltage is appropriate, the bulb will shine.