Light bulb

From Knowino
Jump to: navigation, search

A light bulb or lightbulb, also known as an incandescent lamp, is a sealed body of glass (a bulb or globe) encasing a source of illumination. The globe contains two electrical points of contact, a filament (a coil made of tungsten that glows brightly when current is applied), and an amount of an inert gas.

The electric light bulb is usually credited to Thomas Alva Edison, who filed for a patent dated January 27, 1880 (patent #223898(US)); however multiple inventors and scientists at the time were also working to produce an incandescent bulb. Englishman Sir Joseph Swan produced an electric bulb in 1878.

In 1880 Edison and his engineering staff produced a bulb very similar to the one we have today, using a bamboo fiber filament lamp that lasted between 1200-1500 hours and was rated at 16 watts.

[edit] Modern light bulbs

Different types of light bulbs exist today as a result of lighting requirements and energy demands.

Information.svg Some content on this page may previously have appeared on Citizendium.
Personal tools
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Community
Toolbox