Does this question give enough to be solved?

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on a physics problem involving a 9.0V battery connected to four light bulbs, questioning whether sufficient information is provided to determine the current through the circuit. Participants agree that without knowing the resistance or wattage of the bulbs, or the configuration (series or parallel), the problem is underspecified. The only feasible approach is to express the current symbolically, assuming a variable resistance R. The consensus highlights the necessity for clearer problem statements in educational settings.

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A 9.0V battery is connected to 4 light bulbs, what is then current through the circuit?

This was off my high school physics final I took 3 days ago. Is it just me or is there not enough info to figure it out? If the watts or resistance was given it would be possible, but I don't see how it is like this. I don't need an answer to the problem but if you explain how it could be done, if it can be. And yes this absolutely all the info I got for the question.
 
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The question is underspecified. The best you might do is provide a symbolic result, with an assumed bulb resistance, say R. Even then you would have to make some assumptions about how the bulbs are wired (series/parallel).
 
Exactly what I was thinking. The issue is that it was multiple choice, and with a limited amount of.time so I couldn't sit and find what logical, possible scenario might be. Plus my answer may not have been an option. My teacher must have a had a typo. She is known for that... I'll have to have that corrected.
 

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