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  • Student muscle-power lights bulbs

    Cambridge Chronicle, MA
    Nov 11 2004

    Student muscle-power lights bulbs


    "Come on, pedal harder. We got the incandescent bulb up to 100
    degrees, enough to boil water!"

    Tad Sudnick encouraged his students, but try as they might, the
    compact fluorescent bulb wouldn't break 30. Using a bicycle rigged to
    generate electricity and turn on a light bulb, the students used
    their muscle power to experience the difference between a 60-watt
    incandescent and 15-watt compact fluorescent bulb.

    "A 15-watt compact fluorescent light bulb gives off the same
    amount of light as a 60-watt incandescent bulb, so where does the
    rest of the energy go?" explained Elke Hodson, a volunteer from MIT's
    Students for Global Sustainability group.

    As the students discovered, it becomes heat. We don't use light
    bulbs to heat our homes, so this is wasted energy. "That's why our
    parents tell us to turn off the lights to stay cool in the summer,"
    said Rashaad Wharton.

    The bicycle-lighting experiment was part of an Energy Project
    between the Tobin School and an Armenian School in Cambridge's sister
    city, Yerevan. While the United States consumes very high levels of
    electricity, Armenia has been forced to conserve due to a severely
    restricted supply. Eighth-grade students are exchanging questions
    over the Internet, and will compare their personal consumption and
    sources of energy. To learn more, visit the Project's Web site a
    www.cpsd.us/Tobin/directory/Grade8/Energy_Project/Intro.html.

    More calculations were necessary to decide which bulb was
    preferred because a fluorescent bulb can cost twice as much as an
    incandescent. But the expense of the extra electricity to light the
    incandescent far exceeded the fluorescent bulb's initial cost.
    Compact fluorescent bulbs save between $10 and $15 per year in energy
    costs, and their bulbs last five to 10 times longer than standard
    incandescent bulbs.

    Elke also explained fluorescent bulbs currently contain mercury,
    a toxin. The solution to not poisoning the landfill is to recycle
    fluorescent bulbs. Cambridge accepts fluorescent light bulbs and
    other mercury devices for recycling at the Public Works drop-off
    center, 147 Hampshire St., Tuesdays and Thursdays from 4 to 7:30 p.m.
    and Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
    From: Baghdasarian
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