UV stands for ultra violet.ATP for Adenosine Tri Phosphate.
UV-A
The UV rays are of three types. they are UV-A, UV-B, UV-C.
somethin with the uv somethin with the uv
The UV light is different to that of fluorescent light. The UV originates from the sun. The latter one does not.No, it is not. UV is different.
ATP - adenosine triphosphate
UV-A
The UV rays are of three types. they are UV-A, UV-B, UV-C.
somethin with the uv somethin with the uv
UV energy is in UV rays. These are high energy rays.
The UV light is different to that of fluorescent light. The UV originates from the sun. The latter one does not.No, it is not. UV is different.
The difference between UV active and inactive compounds is the pi orbitals. Compounds with more pi orbitals are more UV active than those without. Aromatic compounds are generally UV active.
Yes, UV light and UV rays are the same thing, light emit "rays."
ATP - adenosine triphosphate
There is nothing wrong with UV. It does what it does.
UV-B.
UV is commonly broken up into three rough groupings called UV-A, UV-B, and UV-C. Oxygen and nitrogen absorb UV-C and break apart. Some of the oxygen forms ozone. Ozone absorbs UV-C and some UV-B and breaks apart. Ozone also absorbs UV-B and reradiates it randomly. UV-A (the sutff good for tanning) is pretty much just passed thru to the surface of the Earth. So some UV is blocked by oxygen (UV-C), just not any of UV-B, which directly strikes our DNA since we are largely transparent to UV-B and DNA is not.
The old ATP tally differs from the new ATP tally by about 2 ATP.