copake_ham said:
Depends on what you mean by "light bulb".
In olden days, ham radio operators would "test" radiating patterns of various antennas by waving a flourescent light bulb (really a tube) along the antenna wire. It was the RF energizing the florescence that lit the tube.
This would not work with an incandescent bulb which uses a filament.
I agree fully with most of what you are saying.
Consider this though. A light bulb is a tungsten metal filament in an inert atmosphere, and a flash bulb is a magnesium metal filament with an oxidant present.
Electrically generated heat causes both filaments to glow, but the flashbulb ignites due to the oxidant and the light bulb does not, it just glows.
If there is enough electrically induced current to fire a flash bulb (about 3 V or 2 D batteries in old style holders) then a 1.5 v or 3 v tungsten lamp would also be expectd to glow in the presence of a similar induction field. And, tungsten is a better element for that than magnesium.
This is what I once saw demonstrated.
In fact, there is a small test device for microwave ovens that relies on a small LED with an inductor embedded in plastic. You move it around the microwave on the outside, and if there is a leak, the LED lights up due to the induced current. Same thing with a tungsten bulb if there is enough current flowing. The lower the voltage rating on the bulb, the brigher the glow from a given microwave current IIRC.
Just some thoughts for you to ponder.
PE