Yes
Yes, plants require carbon dioxide for photosynthesis, a process in which they convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose and oxygen using sunlight as energy.
Carbon Dioxide
Yes, the reactions that fix carbon dioxide are sometimes called dark reactions because they do not directly require light energy to occur. These reactions typically take place in the stroma of chloroplasts during photosynthesis and are also known as the Calvin cycle.
Oxygen + Water ---------> Carbon Dioxide + Glucose
Oxygen + Water ---------> Carbon Dioxide + Glucose
The gas is carbon dioxide.
Photosynthesis is a process that does not release carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. Instead, during photosynthesis, plants absorb carbon dioxide from the environment and convert it into oxygen through a series of chemical reactions.
The carbohydrate-synthesizing reactions of photosynthesis directly require carbon dioxide, water, and sunlight. Through the process of photosynthesis, plants use these raw materials to produce glucose, a simple sugar that serves as the building block for larger carbohydrates such as starch.
There are three carbon dioxide, water, and sunlight.
Yes, trees require carbon dioxide for their growth and survival through a process called photosynthesis.
The correct reactants for the light reactions of photosynthesis are b) carbon dioxide and water. During these reactions, light energy is used to split water molecules, releasing oxygen and producing ATP and NADPH, which are then used in the Calvin cycle to fix carbon dioxide. However, carbon dioxide is not directly involved in the light reactions themselves; it is utilized in the subsequent dark reactions (Calvin cycle).
water and chlorophll