cause u just don't
You cannot get energy directly from food that you eat because your body need some time like an hour or two hour to digest the food. Well if you need instant energy you have some fudge or glucose.
During cellular respiration, the food you eat is broken down into molecules that release energy. This energy is then converted into a form that your cells can use. So, you don't get energy directly from the food you eat, but rather from the molecules produced during cellular respiration.
Ask yourself where the "food" gets its energy.
For several reasons, but one of the most obvious is our food. We eat food to get energy; the food comes directly from plants, or indirectly through the animals we eat (which, in turn, eat plants, or other animals that eat plants).
energy directly from its food
Their food, directly. As that food is either plants, or animals that eat plants, or animals that eat animals that eat plants, and so on, every animal indirectly gets its energy from the sun.Save for animals around thermal vents in the ocean depths, of course, those ultimately get it from warmth and minerals.
We get the energy we need from the food we eat.
from food you eat and the food gets energy from sun.
it eat the energy
The sun aids to human nutrition directly and indirectly. Directly, the sun's rays provide vitamin D and indirectly through ATP/photosynthesis It gives energy to plants that we eat and the animals that eat them (which we also eat.) You will get the most indirect nutrition from the the sun (energy) if you eat plants.
it doesn't get energy directly from the sun it gets the suns energy from whatever producers it eats and if its a carnivore than it eats herbivores and herbivores eat producers so the rat gets energy from the herbivore which gets energy from the sun.
When you consume food, your body breaks it down into sugar. Your body uses the sugar as energy for the cells. Some foods break down into sugar faster than others.