the ATP generated
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Alternating current, yes. But it is not quite correct to say "electrons move to the homes... " rather, it is the CURRENT that moves to the home. It is more like a wave, where the energy is transmitted from one particle to the next.
1. heat. If it's hot enough, blackbody radiation (e.g. incandescent light bulb) 2. Electromagnetic radiation (radio waves, magnetic or electric coupling to adjacent conductors) if the current is changing.
The next state of matter after plasma is called beam, where all the electrons, for some reason, all move the same direction.
Increases by 1
Um. When the fleet admiral gets drunk and orders the aircraft carrier to move to an obscure location and forgets where he put it when he wakes up next morning?
No, electrons move in a circuit in a continuous flow called an electric current. Electrons move from the negative terminal of the battery, through the circuit components, and return to the positive terminal. Each electron only moves a short distance within the circuit before passing its energy to the next electron.
No defenitley NOT
I think you are looking for the answer 'electrons', but this is a very simplistic way of thinking of conduction. In a solid conductor such as a metal there are delocalised electrons which move in an electric field. They are not passed from particle to particle.
I think you are looking for the answer 'electrons', but this is a very simplistic way of thinking of conduction. In a solid conductor such as a metal there are delocalised electrons which move in an electric field. They are not passed from particle to particle.
No, electrons are around nucleus but at a great distance.
NADP molecules act as electron carriers in the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis. They accept electrons and protons from water molecules that are split during photosynthesis, and transport these to the Calvin cycle where they are used to reduce carbon dioxide to produce sugars.