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  • How do light bulbs work? By any standard, the invention of the light

  • bulb was a real light bulb moment. [Ping!] And it didn't come a moment too soon. Because

  • although we'd known how to produce electricity through chemical reaction since 1800, and

  • how to generate it mechanically since 1831, thanks to Michael Faraday, there just weren't

  • very many uses for the new force, other than impressing other Victorian scientists by using

  • it to make sparks and flashes. Of course, the early electrical pioneers were

  • bright [geddit?] enough to realise you could use an electrical current to make a wire glow

  • -- and if you made a thin enough piece of wire with a high enough melting point then

  • it would glow white hot. This is because, in pretty much the simplest possible terms,

  • the atoms in the metal release some light photons when their electrons become excited

  • by the electrical current. The problem with using these glowing wires

  • as a source of light became obvious after a couple of minutes really. Exposed to the

  • oxygen in the air, they would quickly oxidise and disintegrate. The light bulb was the solution:

  • a see-through sleeve to protect the hot wire. Like many good ideas, it had many fathers.

  • Indeed, the light bulb as we know it was invented pretty much simultaneously on both sides of

  • the Atlantic in the 1870s, by Joseph Swan, who was British, and by Thomas Edison, who

  • wasn't. And the basic idea has barely changed since.

  • The light bulb is made out of very thin glass, and contains a wire filament made from a metal

  • chosen to have a very high melting point -- usually tungsten, wound around in a coil pattern.

  • Early light bulbs contained a partial vacuum, the space around the filament was emptied

  • of most of the air, reducing the potential for an oxidising reaction to take place. More

  • modern bulbs switched over to the use of an inert gas (one that doesn't react with the

  • white hot element) for the same effect. The result is a bulb that could provide up to

  • 1000 hours of light at the flick of a switch, and sometimes considerably more. One that

  • was manufactured in 1883, just five years after the light bulb was invented, is still

  • in daily use in the UK, 130 years later. America claims another light bulb that's been switched

  • on continuously for 109 years. But for all its ubiquity, the light bulb isn't

  • what you'd call an advanced piece of kit. Even its name is a bit of a misnomer -- we

  • should probably call it the heat bulb, as over 90 per cent of the energy it consumes

  • is converted into heat. Visible light is really just a by-product. It's why old fashioned

  • light bulbs get so hot -- useful if you're making an incubation cage for some chickens,

  • or trying to heat a student flat when your landlord has turned the gas off. But not really

  • ideal. Which is why the humble light bulb has become

  • a threatened species in recent years. More modern compact fluorescent 'energy saving'

  • light bulbs are four times more efficient for producing the same amount of light, and

  • the new generation of LED-based lights are more frugal still. The production and sale

  • of the old incandescent light bulb is now regulated in many countries, with believers

  • in the old ways having to buy in stocks of bulbs for the future. Like in the war.

  • And it's not just in homes and schools and offices that the light bulb is running out

  • of time: Mercedes recently launched a new car that doesn't have a single bulb in it,

  • every bit of illumination (including the headlights) is done by LEDs.

  • That in fact was their big light bulb moment. Except obviously it was LED. LED moment, sounds

  • a bit feeble doesn't it. What will cartoonists do if they can't draw a glowing light bulb

  • over a boffin's head to indicate a good idea. LED moment, doesn't have quite the same ring

  • to it, does it?

How do light bulbs work? By any standard, the invention of the light

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