Tungsten is a metallic element of the periodic table. Because of this, it is not an insulator of energy but a conductor instead.
When an electrical current passes through a bulb, the electrons in the filament (usually made of tungsten) gain energy and move to higher energy levels. They then release this energy in the form of light and heat, causing the bulb to glow. This process is called incandescence.
Tungsten has a high melting point of 3422°C, allowing it to withstand the high temperatures generated in an incandescent light bulb. Additionally, tungsten is a good conductor of electricity, enabling efficient conversion of electrical energy into light energy in the bulb.
At a ground state, argon has three energy levels. For future reference, just count the number of horizontal rows (also named periods) an element is from the top of the periodic table.
Electrons jump energy levels when they absorb or emit a photon of specific energy that matches the energy difference between the levels. This process is governed by the principles of quantum mechanics.
Tungsten atoms contain six energy levels (shells). The outermost energy level is the sixth energy level. It has two electrons in the 6s sublevel.
tungsten is a poor conductor of electricity,tungsten glows when electrical energy from the energy source is flowing through the conductor of electricity and when electrical energy reach the metal filament(tungsten) the tungsten gets electrical energy and produce heat when it became white-hot and the tungsten glows the glows is called light.
Bromine has FOUR energy Levels.
Arsenic has 8 levels of energy.
Germanium has 4 energy levels.
Chlorine has three energy levels.
There are 3 energy levels in Silicon. Which ever row it is in the Periodic Table, that is how many energy levels it has. The structure is 1s2 2s22p63s23p2
Germanium has 4 energy levels.
Iodine has seven energy levels.
Xenon has 6 energy levels.
Xenon has 6 energy levels.
Silver has 5 energy levels. 😄