No.
Carbon Dioxide (CO2)= 1 Carbon molecule, 2 Oxygen.
Water (H2O)= 1 Oxygen, 2 Hydrogen.
Glucose (C6H12O6)= 6 Carbon, 12 Hydrogen, 6 Oxygen.
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No, water and glucose are solutions. Carbon dioxide is an element though.
Yes, carbon dioxide (CO2) contains carbon and oxygen, water (H2O) contains hydrogen and oxygen, and glucose (C6H12O6) contains carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. So, all three compounds have elements within them.
Carbon dioxide, water and energy.
In photosynthesis, carbon dioxide and water are used to produce glucose and oxygen. In cellular respiration, glucose and oxygen are used to produce energy (ATP), carbon dioxide, and water. So, carbon and oxygen are elements that are cycled through both processes.
Respiration: Glucose + Oxygen = Carbon Dioxide + Water + Energy/ATP
The necessary elements for photosynthesis to occur are sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water. These elements are used by plants to produce glucose (food) and oxygen. Chlorophyll, a pigment found in chloroplasts, is also essential for capturing the sunlight needed for the process.
Carbon dioxide and water
Yes, oxygen and light elements found in glucose originate from carbon dioxide and water during the process of photosynthesis in plant cells. Carbon dioxide is converted into glucose with the help of sunlight, producing oxygen as a byproduct.
carbon dioxide + water --------> glucose + oxygen.
To complete photosynthesis, a plant needs light, water, and carbon dioxide. After photosynthesis is complete, oxygen and glucose will be present.
No, carbon dioxide does not directly make glucose. Glucose is typically produced through the process of photosynthesis in plants, where carbon dioxide, water, and sunlight are used to produce glucose and oxygen.
the products of respiration: carbon dioxide + water. oxygen + glucose --> carbon dioxide + water. to remember it, think of breathing in oxygen and your food is the glucose, then when you breathe out, you release carbon dioxide and water vapour.