Physics, asked by ayush275788, 10 months ago

A current of 1A flows when an electric bulb is connected to 220V mains.What would be the current when the same bulb is connected to 110V mains?​

Answers

Answered by urmidram
0

Answer:

Explanation:

Almost all electric lamps are highly non-ohmic outside their designed voltage range. The resistance of the old-type incandescent lamp, when cold, is much less than when lighted, so when connected to half its design voltage, it will be something mildly unpredictable. Fluorescent lamp and its ancillary circuits that are designed for 220 volts will probably not light at all at 110 volts, but cause the igniter and ballast overheat instead. Some CFL products are designed to drive the lighting element at the same voltage no matter what the input is, so it will draw more and not less current. A LED might not light up at all, or it might give 50% luminosity. All depends on the kind of lighting fixture and luminous element we are discussing. Direct application of Ohm's law will not work.

Answered by Olivertwist74
0

Answer:

The current is same for 110 v maim

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