The sun's rays get trapped inside the green house and help the plants grow.
Yes. The greenhouse gases trap the sun's heat.
Any greenhouse effect (including the one that takes place in an actual greenhouse) is a process by which the energy of sunlight is retained more than it otherwise would be. It's all about sunlight.
Greenhouse gases like water vapour, carbon dioxide, and methane are not caused by the sun. They are warmed by the sun and they hold the heat to keep the earth warm. This is called the greenhouse effect.
The Sun is the source of energy. Heat from the sun radiates up from the surface of the earth and warms the greenhouse gases.
This has been dubbed "the greenhouse effect" (even though it is not related to how a greenhouse operates). The greenhouse effect is your friend - this would be a cold, dead planet otherwise. Of course, you get global warming if you introduce higher quantities of gasses that are better at "greenhousing" than the atmosphere you're adding them to.
The sun lights and warms the planet. Greenhouse gases in the atmosphere retain this heat to allow life on earth. The greenhouse effect is driven by the carbon cycle. The sun supports photosynthesis, the process used by green plants and some bacteria to make compounds such as carbohydrates. The sun powers the cycling of matter, it also drives the climate and weather systems that distribute heat and fresh water.
The sun.
The sun.
Yes It does.
Carbon dioxide helps the greenhouse in one way. Plants in the greenhouse needs carbon dioxide to grow.
Greenhouse effect
The sun.