Asked by xochitl
A circuit in a home provides power to a light fixture. The homeowners want to use a compact fluorescent bulb instead of an incandescent bulb. Compact fluorescent bulbs can produce as much light as incandescent bulbs but with less energy. How is this possible?(1 point)
Responses
Fluorescent bulbs have been designed to put out more energy than they receive.
Fluorescent bulbs have been designed to put out more energy than they receive.
Incandescent bulbs produce other forms of energy, too, including heat.
Incandescent bulbs produce other forms of energy, too, including heat.
Energy is destroyed when it passes through an incandescent bulb.
Energy is destroyed when it passes through an incandescent bulb.
Fluorescent bulbs produce other forms of energy, too, including heat.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Incandescent bulbs produce other forms of energy, too, including heat.
Explanation: Incandescent bulbs convert most of the electrical energy into heat (infrared) rather than visible light, while compact fluorescents convert a higher fraction of the input energy into visible light, so they give the same light output using less power.
Explanation: Incandescent bulbs convert most of the electrical energy into heat (infrared) rather than visible light, while compact fluorescents convert a higher fraction of the input energy into visible light, so they give the same light output using less power.
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