Yes. All organic nutrients contain carbon - carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids. Monosaccharides form rings in aqueous solutions. The number of sides the ring has is determined by how many carbons there are.
Carbon, hydrogen and oxygen
stupid pice crap
Yes. It is a 5-carbon monosaccharide.
Glucose
1:2:1
No. It is a 5-carbon monosaccharide with the molecular formula C5H10O4 .
Monosaccharide's consist of only one sugar molecule. (Its the basic molecular unit of all Carbohydrates). Most of them have a carbon backbone that ranges between three to seven carbon atoms. Those carbon atoms also have a hydrogen and a hydroxyl group linked to them.
A carbohydrate with five carbon atoms in its molecular structure.
When the number of carbon atoms in a molecule is low (from three to seven), then the carbohydrate is a simple sugar, or monosaccharide.
fructoseThe monosaccharide responsible for sweet taste in fruit is fructose also known as levulose or fruit sugar.
A triose is a monosaccharide containing three carbon atoms. There are only two trioses, an aldotriose (glyceraldehyde) and a ketotriose.
C6H12O6 This is glucose and not only a carbohydrate ( consisting of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen ) by a sugar technically called a monosaccharide.