The is no such thing as a "six sugar carbon" the is a such thing as a six carbon sugar.
Carbon is an element, it does not consist of sugar or anything else but itself.
Six carbon, twelve hydrogen, six oxygen.
Formula C6 H12 O6 means it has six atoms of carbon, 12 atoms of hydrogen and six atoms of oxygen. It is monosaccharide. It is glucose, the form of sugar our cells need for energy.
fructose
Glucose
Six carbon atoms are there.Its formula is C6H8O7.
The skeletal formula for ethane will show how the six hydrogen atoms share 1 electron with carbon in order to form six carbon-hydrogen covalent bonds. The two carbon atoms, in turn, will each share an electron to form on carbon-carbon covalent bond. This makes up the ethane molecule.
Glucose, fructose, and galactose are all examples of six-carbon sugars. They all have the same chemical formula, but have different structural formulas.
Glucose, fructose, and galactose are all examples of six-carbon sugars. They all have the same chemical formula, but have different structural formulas.
a six carbon sugar
Formula C6 H12 O6 means it has six atoms of carbon, 12 atoms of hydrogen and six atoms of oxygen. It is monosaccharide. It is glucose, the form of sugar our cells need for energy.
fructose
To a six-carbon sugar :) Enjoy!
C6H12O6 (six atoms of carbon, 12 atoms of hydrogen, and 6 atoms of oxygen making it a carbohydrate, because of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen
Such common sugar is Glucose C6H12O6 but Fructose, Glactose and Mannose also have the same formula.
six molecules
Yes. Any Glycosaminoglycan consists of repeating units of hexose (six-carbon sugar) or a hexuronic acid, linked to a hexosamine (six-carbon sugar containing nitrogen).
There are different types of sugar but a common sugar has the formula C6H12O6 so it would contain 24 separate atoms. "Simple sugar" is sometimes used as another name for glucose, which does have the above formula. However, if you mean table sugar, that's a disaccharide of glucose and fructose, C12H22O11, a total of 45 atoms.
Glucose