Can Human Touch Activate Fluorescent Lights?

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Human touch can indeed activate fluorescent lights due to the presence of static electricity, which excites the gas inside the bulbs. Fluorescent lamps emit light when a phosphor coating converts UV light produced by plasma into visible light, and this phosphor can react to various energy inputs. The phenomenon may also involve a cascade effect where one phosphor's excitation leads to neighboring phosphors emitting light. Additionally, there is a distinction between fluorescence, which ceases immediately after excitation, and phosphorescence, which continues for a while after the energy source is removed. Understanding these principles could inspire innovative low-energy lighting solutions.
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sorry if this is the wrong section...i really don't know where to put it. well the other night i was trying to fall asleep in my room, and it was completely dark, or close to it. and i saw this weird glow, so i grabbed out, and pulled my flouescent lightbulb near me. I would touch it and it would glow, like very, very faintly, but it lit up whenever i touched it. Is this possible? or was it just my brain or something? is it possible that the energy from my figertips was enough to light it up?
thanks in advance.
 
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It sure does happen; thanks to static electricity. It has to do with the gas in fluorescent bulbs because they are easily excited by electricity.
 
Fluorescent lamps work by having a phosphor coating that converts the original UV light produced by the plasma to a visible range. Those phosphors also react to other energy input such as static electricity or even cosmic rays. Try looking at your turned-off TV in the dark, and you'll likely see the screen glowing very faintly.
A neat thing to try is to take a piece of plastic such as a sandwich bag and rub a fluorescent tube with it. You can get a pretty decent amount of light.
 
huh, i never knew that, that's cool. thanks for the quick replies
 
The phosphor also has a persistency in emitting the visible light. You can see the tube glowing for a time after turning of the power.
 
Good point, Digoff. I never thought of it before, but I wonder if it might be a matter of the output of one phosphor inciting a neighbour to re-emit. There could be a cascade effect.
 
Here's what an old Modern Physics text by Robert L. Sproull says about the subject:

(1) Flourescence, which is light emitted practically simultaneoulsy with the introduction of the excitation energy and ceases as soon as the exciting radiation ceases. (2) Phosphorescence, which is light that presist some time after excitation is removed. The division between these two classes is usually made by stating that, if most of the light is emitted within ~10^-8 sec after the excitation ceases, the solid is flourescent; otherwise it is phosphorescent.

He later explains how excited electrons can get trapped ("...shallow wells adjacent to the luminesecent center...") until they can get enough energy to surmount the energy barrier. This trapping/storage of energy is what is responsible for the persistence of light emitted by phosphors.

Regards
 
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Cool. Thanks.
 
o.0 nice...now i understand
 
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sounds like a good basis for low energy lazer...could be workable...??
just a thought.
j (compentium0)
 
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