The process of photosynthesis uses the Sun's energy to create more complex carbon bonds and assemble sugars. When these sugars are broken back down to their constituent elements, which require less energy, the excess energy transfers to the plant or other organism consuming the sugars.
Photosynthesis is the process plants use to convert light energy to chemical energy.
For more information, check 'additional information' at the bottom.
The plant leaves take in carbon dioxide and sunlight from the air. Then the plant cells turn that into chemical energy to grow, which is in other words, food.
Producers are the beginning of the chain of energy that travels through the food chain. These are organisms, such as plants, that turn inorganic material into biomass.
Only this much energy is transferred to each level because plants take up 90% of the sun's energy because they are obviously the most populated, and primary consumers such as cows aren't as populated as plants so they only get 10% of the remaining energy and so on as for examples of humans, and then lions. Lions 0.1% energy Humans 1% energy Cows 10% energy Plants 100% energy Hope this helped! :)
A theoretical model is presented to account for the physical mechanism of energy transfer from antenna molecules to the reaction centers in photosynthesis. The energy transfer is described by a generalized transport equation or "master equation". The solution of this equation for the proposed model gives a relationship between the antennae interaction energy and the transfer rate. The results are shown to be in agreement with inter-antenna transfer rates calculated from experimental fluorescence lifetimes. Previous theories were based either on the Förster mechanism, which is valid for very small interaction energies, or an exciton model valid for very large interactions, but experimental results seemed to indicate that the actual situation was intermediate between these two. The Förster theory and the exciton model are limiting cases of the master equation.
Plants and some algae get their energy from the Sun. Most other living beings (including us humans) get their energy from plants. Energy is stored as chemical energy, which we use. Plants use chemical energy, too, as energy storage.Plants and some algae get their energy from the Sun. Most other living beings (including us humans) get their energy from plants. Energy is stored as chemical energy, which we use. Plants use chemical energy, too, as energy storage.Plants and some algae get their energy from the Sun. Most other living beings (including us humans) get their energy from plants. Energy is stored as chemical energy, which we use. Plants use chemical energy, too, as energy storage.Plants and some algae get their energy from the Sun. Most other living beings (including us humans) get their energy from plants. Energy is stored as chemical energy, which we use. Plants use chemical energy, too, as energy storage.
The main function of starch in plants is to store energy.
You can eat plants.......
because you can't transfer energy
The Sun heats plants, animals eat plants, and we eat the animals.
photosynthesis.
False.
Tecnically, the Sun, because the Sun transfers it's energy to plants through sunlight and plants transfer energy to cows through digestion.
carnivores would totally depend on herbivores to transfer energy from plants into a form of which they can eat,themselves. omnivores would partially depend as they can only transfer certain plants into energy.
they use sunlight and others to transfer it into energy.
I think you mean "chylorophyl". It is a cell structure plants use to transfer sunlight into energy.
The transfer of energy is called Energy Transfer
Energy comes from the Sun to Earth - and some of it to plants - via sunlight, which can travel through empty space. Plants store part of the energy they get, and we then get the energy from the plants we eat. We - those who are not strict vegans, that is - also get some of the energy in a more indirect way, by eating animal products (meat, eggs, milk); in this case, the animal gets energy from the plants, and stores part of it, and we get the energy from the animal products.
No, of course not. Only plants,some bacteria and algae are photosynthetic