Into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide.
A carbon residue is formed.
No, plants use carbon dioxide to go through the process of photosynthesis to make oxygen.
Yes, young stars burn Hydrogen and produce Helium. As they age, they often turn into red giants, and at that time they burn the Helium, making Oxygen and Carbon. Very large stars can even burn the Oxygen and Carbon, making even heaver elements, such as Iron.
Because carbon dioxide is not flammable and things cannot burn in it. So if it envelopes a fire, that fire will go out.
Carbon dioxide, water and light.
Carbon is not 'moved' from the atmosphere. It can be absorbed and stored by things like plants and animals, but when they die and decay the carbon will go back into the carbon cycle again. Try googling 'carbon cycle'
Plants go through photosynthesis, a process that uses the sun, carbon, and water. Photosynthesis is a chemical reaction that produces a special type of sugar that provide the plant energy.
Carbon dioxide goes back to the atmosphere through respiration, the decomposition of plants and animals, and combustion.
because they don't go through photosynthesis like plants.
They have to bring in sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide to go through photosynthesis. They get the water through the roots and the light and carbon dioxide through the stomata in the leaf.
"fix" carbon dioxide? If turning CO2 into oxygen is what you meant. They are called plants. Better go with the green ones. They use light, CO2 and H2O as food and ends up producing O2 or oxygen.
because it releases carbon monoxide, which is deadly. you can't smell it, feel it, hear it, taste it, or feel it. if I scared you enough, go outside and buy a carbon monoxide alarm ( it's pretty cheap)