ashishsinghal said:
Here how have you taken voltage in each bulb is P1/A. Have you considered that the power of the bulb remains same. But it will not remain same.
...... these are not equal
I didn't do your math, but I agree that the power of each bulb does NOT stay the same as it was when installed in parallel.
Assumptions? There are times for valid assumptions. When you buy a bulb for you home, they list the "power" on the box; example 100 watts. Now that ASSUMES that you're going to put it in a normal household circuit of 110-120 volts. BUT if you put it on 72 volts [WHO DOES THAT?], so they're not being dishonest, they're advertising "normal usage".
Now when it comes to homework problems they try to get us to THINK, so tho nobody might PUT them in series, the author simply wanted us to THINK, and SEE WHAT HAPPENS.
thus, the voltage across each bulb in the beginning, is [valid assumption] goig to be the voltage across the COMBINED bulbs; that is, there is going to be an intermediate voltage between them that must be used to calculate the "new" power at that "new" voltage, not to mention, with the "new" amperage.
Thus the original P1 and P2 will NOT be the same when connected in series; I call it P3 for the first one, and P4 for the second one.
And these "new" powers will NOT match the advertised "powers"... because they are not being "used" in the "normal" way. ie, it's an "academic" question, and we allow those when we enter the field of academia.
This response is NOT necessarily only to the person I'm quoting, it's to everybody, and I just thought this was a good place to do it.
Reader's Digest version; the POWER that a bulb puts out DEPENDS on the voltage applied to it, NOT to what it says on the package.
thx,
LarryR : )