A 100 watt bulb will normally glow brighter than a 50 watt bulb as long as you are comparing similar style bulbs. You have to compare Incandescents to Incandescents, Fluorescent to Fluorescent, LED to LED, and so forth. You also have to make sure your bulbs are similar in light patterns since you can have general dispersion lighting, spot lighting, flood lighting, and so forth. So, once again as long as you are comparing like style bulbs, yes a 100 watt bulb is brighter than a 50 watt bulb.
That depends on so much more then just the watt of the bulb, but if you have two identical bulbs where the only difference is the amount of watt, then logic dictates that 25watt is brighter then 10watt
The 100W bulb emits more light energy per second than the 40W bulb, so it appears brighter due to the higher intensity of light. This increase in brightness is a result of the higher power consumption and light output of the 100W bulb compared to the 40W bulb.
Depending on the length of the wire difference between the shot and long wire, in technical fact the bulb would be brighter if a shorter wire was used, but not that much brighter. Energy is used up as it travels along wires.
Generally, yes. It will all depend on the voltage and the current capabilities of the supply. Mostly in torches (flashlights), you can. Using a krypton bulb wil be brighter but draw more current, reducing the life of the batteries.
Original answer: Because it gives off more power. Updated answer: In general, because the 100-watt bulb produces more total light (lumens) because it also consumes more power than the 60-watt bulb. However, a 60-watt can produce more lumens than a 100-watt bulb, depending on the types of bulbs in question.
The Shorter the wire the brighter the bulb ! Because if it is short then it get brighter and the more batterie the brighter the bulb ! Or the lower voltage the brighter the bulb !
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.
more battery's or a better bulb.
As the bulb becomes brighter, more current flows through the filament, increasing its temperature. This increase in temperature causes the filament to glow more intensely, resulting in a brighter light output.
Adding more batteries to a simple circuit will increase the voltage supplied to the bulb. This will cause the bulb to become brighter as it receives more electrical energy. However, if the voltage exceeds the bulb's maximum rating, it may burn out.
Yes. A 60W bulb has a higher resistance than the 40W buld. The extra resistance requires more current to light up the bulb. The fillament then glows brighter.
Yes, a 100-watt light bulb is brighter than a 60-watt light bulb because it produces more light.
That does not depend directly on the brightness of the bulb, it depends on the current drawn by the bulb (which depends on the efficiency of the bulb). For example an incandescent bulb will draw much more current than a much brighter CFL bulb or LED bulb. Therefor switching to an brighter LED bulb can make the battery last much longer while switching to a brighter incandescent bulb will make the battery run down quicker.
it has more energy than one bulb
Yes, a light bulb gets brighter when the current flowing through it increases. This is because the increase in current results in more energy being converted into light and heat by the filament in the bulb, causing it to glow more brightly.
The bulb gets brighter because the filament is getting hotter. If the filament's temperature gets too high it will melt at some point and fall apart. The current will stop flowing and the bulb will "blow".
That depends on so much more then just the watt of the bulb, but if you have two identical bulbs where the only difference is the amount of watt, then logic dictates that 25watt is brighter then 10watt