Are Mercury-Vapor Lights Considered Incandescent Lights?

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Mercury-vapor lights are not classified as incandescent lights because they do not emit light through the heating of a filament, which is the defining characteristic of incandescent lighting. Instead, mercury-vapor lamps produce light through electron transitions in gas, resulting in a broader spectrum of light compared to the single-color emission of low-pressure sodium lamps. In the United States, most street lights are typically mercury-vapor or sodium-vapor lights, rather than incandescent lights. While LEDs are emerging as a potential option for street lighting, they are not yet widely used in this context. Therefore, by definition, mercury-vapor lights are distinct from incandescent lights.
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By definition, are all mercury-vapor lights NOT incandescent lights?

In practice, are mercury vapor lights ever incandescent lights?


Are most street lights in the United States incandescent lights or mercury-vapor lights or sodium vapor lights or some other type of lights?
 
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Incandescent lights are ussually defined as those that glow because of the blackbody emission from a hot filament (incandescent=heat).
Fluorescent lamps (including Hg and Na) emit light in discrete lines from electron transitions. Low pressure sodium uses only a single line (actually a close together pair) so you get only a single colour (orange) but it is efficent since almost all of the energy goes into this line. Mercury gives a much whiter ligth because it has so many lines and the pressure of the vapor broadens them so they almost overlap - giving a nearly continuous spectra.
The other class of lights would be LEDs but they aren't used in street lighting - yet.
 
So by definition Mercury-vapor lights are not incandescent lights?
 
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