because they are not held in fixed positions
The reducing end of a carbohydrate is found at the anomeric carbon. For glucose, this would be Carbon #1 (C-1).
Glucose is a carbohydrate, which means it contains carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. Specifically, glucose contains 6 carbon, 6 oxygen, and 12 hydrogen atoms.
The formula for glucose is C6H12O6. This means that six carbon atoms can be found within one molecule of glucose, as well as twelve hydrogens and six oxygens. In, for example, photosynthesis, carbon dioxide is involved in a complex series of reactions that form glucose from those molecules, as well as from hydrogen atoms from water. If 54 molecules of carbon dioxide, and thus 54 atoms of carbon, were used in photosynthesis, nine molecules of glucose would be formed, thus meaning that all of the carbon atoms would become glucose. Therefore, all of the carbon atoms can potentially become part of glucose.
In the reaction of respiration glucose and oxygen are broken down to produce carbon dioxide and water
The sugar glucose.
Glucose is the resulting sugars that plants create from photosynthesis. Carbon dioxide + sunlight = glucose.
enzyme-assisted anaerobic process that breaks down one six-carbon molecule of glucose to two three-carbon pyruvates
The glucose is split into 2 molecules of a three carbon compound
The carbon atoms are released as carbon dioxide (C02) which is what humans breathe out
It is dependent on what happens to the Hydrogen atoms.
Its when glucose is split up into 2 three carbon sugars
enzyme-assisted anaerobic process that breaks down one six-carbon molecule of glucose to two three-carbon pyruvates
The reducing end of a carbohydrate is found at the anomeric carbon. For glucose, this would be Carbon #1 (C-1).
Glucose is a carbohydrate, which means it contains carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. Specifically, glucose contains 6 carbon, 6 oxygen, and 12 hydrogen atoms.
glucose and oxygen react to form carbon dioxide water and heat
In the reaction of respiration glucose and oxygen are broken down to produce carbon dioxide and water
The formula for glucose is C6H12O6. This means that six carbon atoms can be found within one molecule of glucose, as well as twelve hydrogens and six oxygens. In, for example, photosynthesis, carbon dioxide is involved in a complex series of reactions that form glucose from those molecules, as well as from hydrogen atoms from water. If 54 molecules of carbon dioxide, and thus 54 atoms of carbon, were used in photosynthesis, nine molecules of glucose would be formed, thus meaning that all of the carbon atoms would become glucose. Therefore, all of the carbon atoms can potentially become part of glucose.