In medium pressure mercury vapor lamps the lines from 200 600 nm are present.
Low pressure mercury vapour lamp diagram.
Amalgam lamps use a mercury amalgam mix to control mercury vapor pressure.
The first mercury vapor lamps were in a lower pressure tube.
One would tip the lamp and electrical contacts on each side of the lamp would send electricity through a liquid mercury which started the lamp.
Two varieties of such lamps exist.
The aperture phosphor coated lamps that jelight company produces employ the same basic design as the double bore low pressure mercury vapor lamps with the exception of a special phosphor coating.
Again transition of the electrons requires least amount of input energy from a colliding electron.
Fused silica is used in the manufacturing to keep the 184 nm light from being absorbed.
Low pressure and high pressure low pressure sodium lamps are highly efficient electrical light sources but their yellow light restricts applications to outdoor lighting such as street lamps where they are widely used.
As pressure increases the chance of multiple collisions gets increased.
This coating covers more than 70 of the diameter of the lighted length of the lamp.
A sodium vapor lamp is a gas discharge lamp that uses sodium in an excited state to produce light at a characteristic wavelength near 589 nm.
Rather than a cold spot the lamp s amalgam spot on pellet regulates mercury vapor pressure during operation and yields up to three times the uvc output of a standard low pressure mercury lamp of the same length.