Electricity and a glass bulb
A bulb does not light up if there is no voltage available across the bulb, or if the bulb is burned out.
No. The light bulb is two words, not a combination of light and bulb.
the wire in your light bulb is a resistor :)
The property that allowed Edison's first light bulb to light up was the flow of electric current through a conductive filament, typically made of tungsten or carbon. This flow of current passed through the filament, heating it up to a high enough temperature to emit light.
If it is a 1.5 volt bulb you can connect it through a series circuit directly to your battery. If the bulb is not made to run on 1.5 volts and needs another voltage, it may not light up!
The person who invented the light bulb was Nikola Tesla look him up.
A bulb does not light up if there is no voltage available across the bulb, or if the bulb is burned out.
No. The light bulb is two words, not a combination of light and bulb.
No. The light bulb is two words, not a combination of light and bulb.
The filament inside a light bulb is typically made of tungsten, which is a poor conductor of electricity. When electricity flows through the filament, it encounters resistance, which causes the filament to heat up and emit light.
the wire in your light bulb is a resistor :)
argon is an element that make up a light bulb
The property that allowed Edison's first light bulb to light up was the flow of electric current through a conductive filament, typically made of tungsten or carbon. This flow of current passed through the filament, heating it up to a high enough temperature to emit light.
If it is a 1.5 volt bulb you can connect it through a series circuit directly to your battery. If the bulb is not made to run on 1.5 volts and needs another voltage, it may not light up!
Thomas Edison. He was born on 11 of February 1847!!
argon is an element that make up a light bulb
The filament inside a light bulb is typically made of tungsten. When electricity passes through the filament, it heats up and produces light through incandescence.