Lighting bulbs without wiresFind out how to light a light bulb with no wire in sight using just a balloon and a little hair. What you need
What to DoWait until it is very dark. Rub the balloon on your hair to charge it up. Wave the charged part of the balloon back and forth near the light bulb... what happens? What may HappenYou should be able to see the light bulb lighting up as you move the balloon! However, if you keep the balloon still nothing will happen. The effect is easy to see with the human eye, but not quite bright enough for video cameras. We've been able to use an image intensifier to make this video, which is why it looks so 'night vision' green. What is going on?An energy saving light bulb is made up of a glass tube filled with a low pressure gas. When you move the charged balloon near the bulb a current will flow in the gas - effectively a spark. This gives the gas energy, which is converted into visible light by the white phosphor on the inside of the tube, which you can see. Why does a current flow in the gas?The gas in the light bulb contains some charged ions created when an electron is knocked off an atom randomly. If you move the negatively charged balloon near the bulb the positive ions will be attracted towards the balloon and the negative ones will be repelled.
These moving ions can produce more ions. An ion will accelerate towards the balloon until it hits something. If it hits a gas molecule hard enough it can knock off an electron and create another two charged particles which will accelerate apart.
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If the balloon is still the charges redistribute themselves and then don't move | When you remove the balloon the charges will attract one another again and so move again. |
If the balloon is really well charged up, sometimes a spark jumps from the balloon to the bulb, this makes a very large current flow and you get a much brighter light.
Energy saving light bulbs and fluorescent tubes (which this experiment should work on too) work in the same way, except that instead of waving a balloon to provide the electric field that moves the ions, we plug them in to the mains. Fluorescent tubes need special circuits to get them started because when you first switch them on there are not many ions available to carry the current. This means that initially you have to use a much higher voltage. This doesn't always work though, which is why they often flicker when you turn them on. Energy saving light bulbs have some electronics built in which do the same job in a more reliable way.
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