Yes, in a proccess called Photosynthesis
Photosynthesis combines carbon dioxide and water, using sunlight to trap energy in the form of glucose in a cell.
CO2 is a waste product of human metabolism, and O2 is a waste product of plant metabolism.
The chloroplasts absorb light, allowing the plant to photosynthesize (make food by absorbing water, carbon dioxide, and sunlight) which absorbs all lights except green light which is why plants are green because they reflect the green light instead of absorbing it.
yes it does especially if it is an energy efficient light.
No, this is because when you see a green plant, it is green because the plant is absorbing all light in the spectrum except for green. A plant will not use green light to power photosynthesis and the plant will die
A green plant can carry out photosynthesis with water, carbon dioxide, and sunlight. These are the essential components needed for the plant to produce glucose and oxygen through the process of photosynthesis.
Tt breathes or takes in CO2 through its leaves through photosynthesis during the day and takes out the carbon to make sugars for the plant to grow and expels oxygen as a by-product.
Chloroplasts are the green organelles in plant cells responsible for capturing light energy through photosynthesis. This energy is then used to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose (food) for the plant.
No, I have not encountered a light green mushroom growing in my plant.
no chlorophyll makes plants green chlorophyll is inside the plant like plant blood but its green
A green plant must obtain water, carbon dioxide, and light energy from its environment in order to carry on photosynthesis. Water is absorbed from the soil through the roots, while carbon dioxide is taken in from the surrounding air through small openings in the leaves called stomata. The light energy needed for photosynthesis is absorbed by chlorophyll in the plant's leaves from sunlight.
The light incident on plant would partially absorbed and converted to heat but that is not the intentional process of the plant. It would rather use light energy to convert water and carbon dioxide to carbohydrate compound.