In an 'old fashioned' incandescent light bulb, the only electrical part inside is the
filament wire itself. When you put a meter across a cold bulb and measure the
resistance, you're measuring the resistance of the filament. More modern and
more efficient artificial light sources, like fluorescent tubes, LED lights and CFLs,
have additional electronic components inside the structure of the bulb.
the wire in your light bulb is a resistor :)
No, a light bulb is not a conductor. A light bulb is made of materials that act as insulators, such as glass and tungsten. The filament inside the light bulb serves as a resistor to generate light when electricity passes through it.
In an 'old fashioned' incandescent light bulb, the only electrical part inside is the filament wire itself. When you put a meter across a cold bulb and measure the resistance, you're measuring the resistance of the filament. More modern and more efficient artificial light sources, like fluorescent tubes, LED lights and CFLs, have additional electronic components inside the structure of the bulb.
While a light bulb does not technically act as a resistor, in practice it does impede the flow of electrons due to its resistance. As electrons pass through the filament of the light bulb, they encounter resistance, which causes them to release energy in the form of heat and light. This phenomenon is what allows the light bulb to produce light.
A light bulb uses electricity as its source of energy.A light bulb to uses electrical energy which is supplied to a resistor that gives off heat as well as light. The resistor is a thin coiled piece of wire made of Tungsten because it has the highest melting point of any metal.For more information see the answer to the Related question shown below.
the wire in your light bulb is a resistor :)
No, a light bulb is not a conductor. A light bulb is made of materials that act as insulators, such as glass and tungsten. The filament inside the light bulb serves as a resistor to generate light when electricity passes through it.
In an 'old fashioned' incandescent light bulb, the only electrical part inside is the filament wire itself. When you put a meter across a cold bulb and measure the resistance, you're measuring the resistance of the filament. More modern and more efficient artificial light sources, like fluorescent tubes, LED lights and CFLs, have additional electronic components inside the structure of the bulb.
It is the filament.
While a light bulb does not technically act as a resistor, in practice it does impede the flow of electrons due to its resistance. As electrons pass through the filament of the light bulb, they encounter resistance, which causes them to release energy in the form of heat and light. This phenomenon is what allows the light bulb to produce light.
A light bulb uses electricity as its source of energy.A light bulb to uses electrical energy which is supplied to a resistor that gives off heat as well as light. The resistor is a thin coiled piece of wire made of Tungsten because it has the highest melting point of any metal.For more information see the answer to the Related question shown below.
No, a light bulb does not act as a resistor in the flow of electrons. A light bulb converts electrical energy into light and heat through the resistance of its filament. Resistors are passive components specifically designed to control the flow of electric current in a circuit.
Most light bulbs don't have resistors; they are resistors. The filament introduces resistance as part of its action. The resistance is what makes it glow. Usually, if you use a resistor with a light bulb or other lighting device (neon tube, LED, etc), it is external. Its purpose is to reduce the voltage to match the requirements of the bulb. For instance, with a 50 ohm resistor, you could probably use a flashlight bulb with a 9 volt battery.
A light bulb uses electricity as its source of energy.A light bulb to uses electrical energy which is supplied to a resistor that gives off heat as well as light. The resistor is a thin coiled piece of wire made of Tungsten because it has the highest melting point of any metal.For more information see the answer to the Related question shown below.
A device that uses a resistor to transform electrical energy into light and heat is an incandescent light bulb. The resistor, also known as a filament, has high resistance, which causes it to heat up and emit light as a result of the electrical current passing through it.
Yes, the inside of a light bulb is a partial vacuum.
wire a resistor across a battery. that is about as simple as it gets. the resistor could be an incandescent light bulb.