AbuBekr
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AC is varying.So why does the brightness not vary?
AbuBekr said:It looks constant to me
AbuBekr said:that is possible too
Nugatory said:there was a fair amount of hysteresis which we attributed to the temperature of the filament not exactly tracking the voltage at the filament.
PeterDonis said:It's actually the current that's the key; the current is what drives the temperature and hence the light output. In an ideal purely resistive AC circuit, the current would be in phase with the voltage; but a real light bulb filament is evidently not very close to an ideal pure resistor.
Nugatory said:the light intensity at any moment will depend on the temperature at that moment, while the power output drives the rate of change of that temperature.
Nugatory said:the resistance of the filament varies by more than a factor of ten across the operating temperature range
Apart from the negligible reactance, due to the coil, it is 'resistive'. But, despite being a metal (tungsten), it is not operated under 'ohmic' conditions (i.e. not constant temperature) and its VI characteristic is not linear. It is clearly not 'reactive' in the conventional sense but, at around a critical range of supply frequencies, the I will measurably lead the V when increasing and decreasing. This has a 'Power Factor' look about it and it certainly could have repercussions in the losses in supply resistance - which is where PF is relevant to Power Engineers.William White said:I think the filament of a light bulb IS very close to being a pure resistor
{Bolding added for emphasis}Nugatory said:Many years ago, I was hanging out with an EE friend of mine, and this topic came up.
Being total hopeless nerds, nothing would do except that we pull a photovoltaic cell out of the clutter on the bench and hook it up to a scope, then expose it to a light powered by 120V 60 Hz (that US line voltage) AC, and another powered by 48v DC. No question, the AC light intensity was fluctuating... fine clear 60 HZ signal. The amplitude never fell to zero and the shape of the signal was not sinusoidal - instead there was a fair amount of hysteresis which we attributed to the temperature of the filament not exactly tracking the voltage at the filament.
Redbelly98 said:{Bolding added for emphasis}
The light intensity will vary at double the mains frequency, reaching a peak (near) when the voltage is at +/- the full amplitude, or twice per mains cycle ... so, it should have been at 120 Hz.
A small flash lamp bulb can carry speech and music quite successfully. The audio signal is impressed on a DC current which keeps the lamp at about half brightness. Using a photo transistor or photo diode with focusing lenses, the sound can be heard across the lab.Nugatory said:Dammit! You're right. Thanks.
It was thirty years ago, and the takeaway memory is "We saw the frequency we predicted given a 60Hz input" not "We saw 60Hz"... somehow over the years I let the one slide into the other until you reminded me. We even discussed that factor of two at the time.
You're also right about the small signal on top of the larger DC offset, but of course with a scope it's easy to dial the DC offset away. That's what we did, as we were trying to see something interesting in the AC signal.
tech99 said:A small flash lamp bulb can carry speech and music quite successfully. The audio signal is impressed on a DC current which keeps the lamp at about half brightness. Using a photo transistor or photo diode with focusing lenses, the sound can be heard across the lab.
Redbelly98 said:The light intensity will vary at double the mains frequency, reaching a peak (near) when the voltage is at +/- the full amplitude, or twice per mains cycle ... so, it should have been at 120 Hz. And when the voltage goes through a zero-crossing, the filament (if it is a filament bulb) does not have time to cool down very much, so you get a relatively small-amplitude intensity variation superimposed on a relative large DC intensity.
That would / could still produce a ripple in their light output. You would need to have reservoir capacitors and / or voltage regulators to reduce the AC ripple on a DC supply voltage to a suitably low level. A cheaper and more efficient solution could be to use tiny inverters to supply the LEDs with AC with a frequency of several hundred Hz.CWatters said:they do/don't have full wave rectifiers in them?
It would be good if you had a photodiode to check the light output. That would answer both questions, whether the light output goes to (or close to) zero, and whether it's at mains frequency or 2x mains frequency.CWatters said:I have some 50Hz LED lights that visibly flicker. I'm wondering if the reason is the lack of an equivalent to the thermal mass of the filament or is it just because they do/don't have full wave rectifiers in them? Guess I'll have to take one apart to find out.
If you look directly at the LED the flicker isn't obvious but if you look away so that they are visible in your peripheral vision (which is more sensitive to motion)they flicker so badly that I've had to remove them.