Electrical filament facts for kids
An incandescent light bulb has a small thin wire with two bigger wires holding it up. This wire is called a filament. The filament is the part of the light bulb that produces light.
Filaments in incandescent light bulbs are made of tungsten. Whenever an electric current goes through the filament, the filament glows. It may also be known as the electron emitting element in a vacuum tube. To make the bulb produce more light, the filament is usually made of coils of fine wire, also known as the coiled coil.
Images for kids
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Original carbon-filament bulb from Thomas Edison's shop in Menlo Park
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Spectrum of an incandescent lamp at 2200 K, showing most of its emission as invisible infrared light.
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Xenon halogen lamp with an E27 base, which can replace a non-halogen bulb
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The 1902 tantalum filament light bulb was the first one to have a metal filament. This one is from 1908.
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Close-up of a tungsten filament inside a halogen lamp. The two ring-shaped structures left and right are filament supports.
Incandescent light bulb#Filament
See also
In Spanish: Filamento (electricidad) para niños