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lord molly | 19:35 Tue 13th Jun 2006 | Science
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how hot does the filiment of a 60W light bulb get? is it hotter than burning magnesium, which burns at roughly 2500*C?



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Have a look in here.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_bulb


Luminous efficacy and efficiency chapter.


S.

a very similar temperature actually


http://hypertextbook.com/facts/1999/AlexanderEng.shtml


Although the temperature you quote is for the metal not the incandecent burning flame - this reaches 5000 degrees.


http://www.chem.leeds.ac.uk/delights/texts/Demonstration_20.htm


Presumably this is why the bulb's light is much yellower than the white light you get from magnesium.


Have a look here:


http://www.rogercavanagh.com/helpinfo/31_colourtemp.stm


opposite 4000K he states "what are they?" I'm old enough to remember them, and they are simply magnesium wire in a glass/plastic envelope. If you search "colour temperature" on Google you will find all the data you need, but be aware that a photographer calls a colour temperature of, say, 12,000K "cooler" than one of 3000K (since a bluer tint is instinctively "colder" than an orangey-red glow)

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cheers guys, all were good links, thanks



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