Yes! The chlorophyll captures the sun's energy and uses it for photosynthesis.
Chlorophyll is the pigment that captures the radiant energy from the sun. This energy is then used to facilitate photosynthesis.
because the events of photosynthesis takes place inside the chlorophyll
The photosynthetic pigments of the organism capture the light energy from the sun and the energy is transferred to chlorophyll "a" so that it's electrons can become excited.
The chemical that facilitates photosynthesis is Chlorophyll.
The chlorophyll is the pigment that takes part in photosynthesis. Photosynthesis is the process by which plants capture sun light energy and store it in chemical bons OS glucose synthesised with help of atmospheric carbon dioxide and Water
Chlorophyll absorbs the light from the sun to produce chemical energy
Chlorophyll traps the light energy from the sun
This chemical is chlorophyll.
Chlorophyll's role in photosynthesis is to convert the light energy from the sun to chemical energy. When enough energy strikes chlorophyll, it looses its electrons and thus they are able to move through a transport chain. Their energy is stored in NADPH which is then transferred to glucose.
The pigments are responsible for capturing the light energy from the sun and converting it to chemical energy. This is the first step of photosynthesis, so the pigments are responsible for initiating photosynthesis.
Plant cells use chloroplast- animals don't capture energy.
I believe it's called photosynthesis. In photosynthesis the plants use the energy from the sun to convert carbon dioxide into sugars and other compounds.