This time i'm asking before trying
So i got that semi-pearl, semi-reflector mercury vapor lamp which is absolutely a beauty to display somewhere in my living room. However, at full blast it'll draw over 400w total, as well as produce enough light to light a whole section of my neighborhood.
Are there ways to run it on high voltage, low current, like a cold cathode tube - or do these ones also rely on thermionic emission and therefore require the full power and only the full power, to avoid sputtering and cathode coating breakdown?
My goal is just to have it light up a bit. I will be getting the original ballast, so i can always run it full power, but that's a bit much in the living room. The alternative is shining a few 365nm LEDs at it - that will activate the phosphor in the reflector part, creating a truly beautiful red glow (see picture). However, it goes without saying i prefer using the lamp itself and only running it at full blast when i'm hosting a block party or something late at night.
EDIT: i can actually make it glow no contact on my little tesla coil. The electrodes are not carrying any current, the gas ionises on RF fields alone. Seems like a good way? Unless there's some physics going on in the arc tube with the metals present that i have no idea of?