No, compact fluorescent bulbs run much cooler that an incandescent bulb. A CF bulb can be unscrewed when the lamp is on whereas an incandescent will give you a bad burn if this is tried.
the bulbs store a lot of energy inside itself before passing the filament and when they unscrewed it, it would stay on for quite a while
Unscrewing any light bulb in series will result in the others turning off. If they are in parallel, unscrewing one will have no effect. For example, say we have lights bulbs L1, L2, and L3, where L1 and L2 are in parallel and L3 is in series with L1 and L2. If L1 is unscrewed: L2 and L3 will stay lit. If L2 is unscrewed: L1 and L3 will stay lit. If L3 is unscrewed: L1 and L2 will turn off.
You break the circuit and they both extinguish (go out).Answer: The circuit will open up causing the current to quit flowing to both bulbs therefore there will be no lighted bulbsCommentYou also have the full supply voltage appearing across the empty lampholder!
It would not be dangerous to leave a light bulb partially unscrewed, however, there is some possibility that it will fall out of the socket. I would advise that if you don't want the bulb to be on, and you don't have a light switch, unscrew the bulb completely and put it away until you need it.
It depends on the type of bulb. Tungsten is the most common element in light bulbs. But there are neon based bulbs also
The plural of bulb is bulbs.
When you unscrew a light bulb in a series circuit, the circuit will break and all the other light bulbs in the circuit will turn off. This is because in a series circuit, the current flows through each component in succession, so removing one component interrupts the flow of current to the rest of the circuit.
When you unscrew one bulb from a series circuit, the electrical path is broken, causing all the other bulbs in that circuit to go out. In a parallel circuit, however, the remaining bulbs continue to function because each one has its own independent path to the power source. Therefore, the outcome depends on the type of circuit configuration.
I wasn't there, didn't observe the experiment, and haven't had the opportunity to inspect the schematic diagram or review the circuit configuration. But if I had to guess ... which I obviously do ... it would be my guess that EITHER each bulb has its own individual battery or power supply, OR that both bulbs share the same power supply and are connected to it in parallel.
The plural form of the noun bulb is bulbs.The plural possessive form is bulbs'.Example: Many of the bulbs' prices have gone up.
since all the bulbs are connected in parallel the voltage supplied for all the bulbs are same......so third bulb also glows with the same brighteness......this is same as the tube lights connected in our house.............