Why does a 200-watt bulb burn brighter than a 100-watt bulb?
We connect a 100-watt light bulb to a 220-volt outlet: it is on. We connect a 200-watt bulb to a 220-volt outlet: it burns brighter, by itself. Question: in the second case, in the wires of the outlet, the electrons run 2 times faster or they became 2 times more Thank you.
Current is the amount of charge that has passed through the conductor per unit of time. That is, simply put, when a 200 W bulb was turned on in a network, twice as many electrons passed through a conductor during the same time than when a 100 W bulb was turned on.