green
mesophyll
Chloroplast is Only in Plant cells. It contains Chlorophyll. Plant Roots Do Contain Chloroplasts.
The palisade cells of plants would contain the most chlorophyll. The palisades are the primary site of photosynthesis in the leaves.
The leaf because it is the major structure for photosynthesis in a plant.
Roughly I'd expect the the C=O band between 1600-1700 and the N-H around 3500-3700. Anyway it should be possible to google that in less than 2 min.
Yes, yes, and no. They can't be polarized, because their vibration is in the direction of their motion, not across it. But they also exhibit diffraction and dispersion ... almost everything you would expect from waves.
mesophyll
The organelle you expect to find in a animal cell but not in a plant cells is the centriole.
a wave with long wavelength and high frequency.
The speed of the wave increases, the frequency remains constant and the wavelength increases. The angle of the wave also changes.
No, as chlorophyll reflects green light and is an essential pigment for plants.
Pitch
Chloroplast is Only in Plant cells. It contains Chlorophyll. Plant Roots Do Contain Chloroplasts.
List four substances you would expect to find in a dried sample of lettuce.
The palisade cells of plants would contain the most chlorophyll. The palisades are the primary site of photosynthesis in the leaves.
The leaf because it is the major structure for photosynthesis in a plant.
Well, I wasn't actually there, so I didn't observe anything. But from my education and personal experience, I know that the product of the wavelength and frequency of any wave is the wave's speed. So I should expect that the product of wavelength and frequency for any color of light, and for that matter, any electromagnetic wave, is always the same number, and ought to always be very close to the speed of light in the medium in which you observed it, or would have observed it had you been there.