Glucose, fructose, and galactose are all examples of six-carbon sugars. They all have the same chemical formula, but have different structural formulas.
Yes. Any Glycosaminoglycan consists of repeating units of hexose (six-carbon sugar) or a hexuronic acid, linked to a hexosamine (six-carbon sugar containing nitrogen).
6 carbon dioxide molecules
Hexose sugar are monosaccharides containing six carbon back bone in it.
It is carbon dioxide that is more stable than sugar. Sugar, which is a general term for several different larger molecules composed of carbon chains, will decompose when heated. This is just one example of the relative instability of sugar when compared to carbon dioxide.
ATP and NADPH novanet :)
The is no such thing as a "six sugar carbon" the is a such thing as a six carbon sugar. Carbon is an element, it does not consist of sugar or anything else but itself.
Glucose, fructose, and galactose are all examples of six-carbon sugars. They all have the same chemical formula, but have different structural formulas.
a six carbon sugar
fructose
To a six-carbon sugar :) Enjoy!
six molecules
Yes. Any Glycosaminoglycan consists of repeating units of hexose (six-carbon sugar) or a hexuronic acid, linked to a hexosamine (six-carbon sugar containing nitrogen).
nuts contain many carbon compounds. Sugar, for example.
Glucose
No. Table sugar is a compound containing carbon, hydrogen and oxygen.
6 carbon dioxide molecules
Hexose sugar are monosaccharides containing six carbon back bone in it.