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Bulb (Incandescent)

An incandescent lamp that produces visible light by heating a tungsten filament. Resistance increases with temperature, creating a non-linear V–I characteristic. A classic load for demonstrating Ohm's law and thermal effects.

Properties

PropertyDescriptionDefaultRange
Rated voltageVoltage at which the bulb operates at rated power (V)12 V1.5 V – 240 V
Rated powerPower dissipation at rated voltage (W)10 W0.5 W – 1 000 W
Resistance modelHow filament resistance varies with temperature (Constant / Thermal)Thermal

Simulation behavior

At rated voltage the bulb glows at full brightness. Below rated voltage it glows dimmer; above it glows brighter but approaches failure.

With the Thermal resistance model, cold resistance is approximately 1/10 of the hot resistance — the bulb draws a large inrush current at switch-on that drops as the filament heats up. With the Constant model, resistance is fixed at V²_rated / P_rated.

If power dissipation significantly exceeds the rated value, the filament burns out (fails open) and the bulb goes dark.

Tips

  • The inrush current with the Thermal model can be 5–10× the steady-state current — size your fuse or transistor switch accordingly.
  • Lower the supply voltage below the rated value to observe dimming — the bulb's resistance also decreases slightly, drawing proportionally less current than a pure resistor would.
  • Replace the bulb with an LED in your design to eliminate the thermal non-linearity and reduce power consumption.