Green plants: the green matter is Chlorophyll (lit. "Green [of] plants), and this is the light- and UV-sensitive chemical involved in the process.
Yes, plants use water, carbon dioxide, and sunlight to perform photosynthesis, during which they produce glucose (sugar) and oxygen as byproducts. The process involves converting carbon dioxide and water into glucose using the energy from sunlight.
ATP and ADP Sugar
Chloroplasts are the organelles in plant cells responsible for converting sunlight into chemical energy through a process called photosynthesis. During photosynthesis, chloroplasts use energy from sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water into sugar (glucose) and oxygen. This process is essential for plant growth and survival.
All plants need sunlight. They need it to perform photosynthesis, the process of converting sunlight+water+CO2 into O2 and sugar. Without sunlight they couldn't complete this process
chlorophyll does not enter the plant, sunlight does.
Because the Sugar is the plant's food - plants make their own food by trapping the energy in Sunlight.
Chloroplast.
To use the energy of sunlight to convert CO2 and water into sugar.
when the plant gets carbon dioxide, water, and sunlight energy it will create oxygen and sugar.
water, energy (sunlight or sugar), oxygen and carbon.
water sunlight carbon dioxide
Photosynthesis requires light energy, which is absorbed by pigments in the chloroplasts of plant cells. This light energy is used to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose and oxygen. Additionally, photosynthesis also requires some chemical energy in the form of ATP and NADPH, which are produced during the light-dependent reactions.