No, oxygen is created from the splitting of water as a waste product. After the electrons from the splitting of water go through photosystem 2 & 1, they would be used to create NADPH in noncyclic photophosphorylation.
NADPH is created in the stroma of the chloroplasts during the light reactions of photosynthesis. It accumulates in the stroma where it is used in the Calvin cycle to help convert carbon dioxide into sugars.
there are two products. those are NADPH and ATP.
Oxygen is the waste material given off during photosynthesis. It is a byproduct of the light-dependent reactions in which water is split to produce oxygen, ATP, and NADPH.
The oxidative phase of the pentose phosphate pathway
The light dependent reaction is a set of biochemical reactions in photosynthesis that require light energy that is captured by light-absorbing pigments. Its three products are oxygen, ATP and NADPH.
The light dependent reaction produces two useful substances for the plant: ATP and NADPH. In addition it produces a waste product, oxygen gas. The ATP and the NADPH are then used in the light independent reaction. The oxygen is released into the atmosphere.
Oxygen is produced as a by-product while energy carriers, NADPH and ATP, are produced for the next step in the process, the Calvin cycle.
During reactions such as photosynthesis, oxygen is produced as a byproduct, ATP is generated as the energy currency for the cell, and NADPH is utilized as a reducing agent to drive various metabolic processes. Oxygen is released into the atmosphere, ATP is used to power cellular activities, and NADPH helps in biosynthetic pathways and other cellular processes.
NADPH molecules created during noncyclic photophosphorylation are used in the Calvin cycle to help convert carbon dioxide into glucose, a process known as carbon fixation. The NADPH molecules provide reducing power necessary for the synthesis of sugars in the stroma of the chloroplast.
oxygen, ATP, NADPH
Photosynthesis generates ATP during the light-dependent reactions (photophosphorylation) and NADPH during the light-dependent reactions (photolysis of water and reduction of NADP+ to NADPH).
The three products of the light-dependent reactions are oxygen (O2), ATP (adenosine triphosphate), and NADPH (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate).