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chloroplasts
Yes!
carbon dioxide and water (with sunlight and chlorophyll - in chloroplasts)
A chloroplast converts sunlight into chemical energy.
The organelle located inside a plant cell that uses sunlight to make energy is the chloroplast. Chloroplasts contain chlorophyll which is the substance used to make the sugar or glucose.
Chloroplasts absorb sunlight for photosynthesis.
They have photosynthetic pigments.They absorb energy of sunlight.
Chloroplasts absorb the light.
It uses its Chloroplasts to absorb sunlight for photosynthesis.
Euglanas have chloroplasts, to absorb sunlight. If sunlight is not available, it can absorb nutrients from decayed organic material.
They absorb the sunlight and help in the process of photosysthesis.
Chloroplasts in leaf cells absorb energy from the sun
No, mitochondria are not photoreactive. It is the chlorophyll in chloroplasts that allows them to use light energy. Mitochondria do not have anything in them to do this. Instead, they make energy by breaking apart glucose.They use light energy indirectly.They use glucose as the fuel. Glucose contain energy from sun light
chloroplasts absorb the sunlight with leads to them photosynthesizing and living.
A colored chemical compound that absorbs sunlight is a pigment. Chlorophyll is a green pigment found in the chloroplasts of plants, algae, and bacteria.
The leaves are the only cells which contain chloroplasts, as an objective of the leaf is to absorb sunlight, which is exactly what the chloroplasts, or more specifically the chlorophyll in the chloroplasts do. The chloroplasts themselves are the organelles in which photosynthesis takes place.
Chloroplasts absorb sunlight and use it in conjunction with water and carbon dioxide gas to produce food for the plant. Chloroplasts capture light energy from the sun to produce the free energy stored in ATP and NADPH through a process called photosynthesis.