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How Does a Fluorescent Light Work?

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How Does a Fluorescent Light Work?

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In a fluorescent light, ballast draws power and creates a voltage differential in a sealed mercury and argon mix to produce ultraviolet that is made visible by a phosphor.

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A fluorescent lamp consists of a gas-filled glass tube with an electrode at each end. This lamp emits light when a current of electrons passes through it from one electrode to the other and excites mercury atoms in the tube’s vapor. The electrons are able to leave the electrodes because those electrodes are heated to high temperatures and an electric field, powered by the electric company, propels them through the tube. However, the light that the mercury atoms emit is actually in the ultraviolet, where it can’t be seen. To convert this ultraviolet light to visible light, the inside surface of the glass tube is coated with a fluorescent powder. When this fluorescent powder is exposed to ultraviolet light, it absorbs the light energy and reemits some of it as visible light, a process called “fluorescence.” The missing light energy is converted to thermal energy, making the tube slightly hot. By carefully selecting the fluorescent powders (called “phosphors”), the manufacturer of the lig

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Actually, you can’t see the light that is immediately given off in the long, narrow tubes of a fluorescent lamp as you can in an electric light bulb, where the glowing tungsten wire lights up the surrounding area. For in a fluorescent lamp, the light comes from a special gas called mercury vapor. When electricity flows through t

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