The 60 HZ AC power to an incandescent bulb can be measured with a phototransistor. To insure I wasn't picking up power line noise, I used battery power. Also simply shadowing the phototransistor cancelled out the signal so I was sure the EMI in the room wasn't causing the signal. I was surprised the thermal time constant of the bulb could be measured at 60Hz (filament is cooling enough to measure an intensity change in 1/120th of a second). Remember that a bulb gets power on positive and negative AC half-cycle.
There are circuits that inject small signals into AC power lines. Google "X-10 protocol". This is an old 1980s technology for controlling lamps through your house with small injected signals. Microchip has an app note but, because the app note doesn't not use transformers, and instead uses capacitive or resistive voltage drops from mains to semiconductor controllers, those links get killed on this site (transformerless is a forbidden topic here - but Google will work for you).
There are circuits that inject small signals into AC power lines. Google "X-10 protocol". This is an old 1980s technology for controlling lamps through your house with small injected signals. Microchip has an app note but, because the app note doesn't not use transformers, and instead uses capacitive or resistive voltage drops from mains to semiconductor controllers, those links get killed on this site (transformerless is a forbidden topic here - but Google will work for you).