High school musical troy Bolton
Plants could benefit astronauts by: 1- Using exhaled carbon dioxide (cleaning the air) 2- Producing oxygen for the astronauts to breath 3- Producing fruits or leaves to eat.
The primary source of carbon for carbon fixation in plants is carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere. In photosynthesis, plants use the enzyme RuBisCO to fix CO2 into organic molecules, eventually producing glucose for energy.
Carbon dioxide is produced by the human metabolism, so you make your own. It doesn't affect you in the slightest if there are plants in the room which absorb some of the carbon dioxide that you produce. If anything, you benefit from the oxygen that the plants produce.
No, it's the other way around. Plants intake Carbon dioxide and put out Oxygen. In the theory of how the world formed, this is how the atmosphere got to contain Oxygen, from plants spreading over the continents and producing Oxygen.
Plants get carbon dioxide from the air we exhale. We breath out carbon dioxide and plants give us oxygen. So when we breath oxygen the air that we exhale is carbon dioxide that goes to plants.
Carbon Dioxide is used by plants for photosynthesis
Carbon Dioxide is needed for plants to make food.
plants do not change carbon monoxide into carbon dioxide. they, on the other hand, convert carbon dioxide in to oxygen.
"fix" carbon dioxide? If turning CO2 into oxygen is what you meant. They are called plants. Better go with the green ones. They use light, CO2 and H2O as food and ends up producing O2 or oxygen.
Carbon dioxide is the source of the food that plants make for themselves through photosynthesis. Photosynthesis is when plants make food out of gasses (such as Carbon dioxide). When the concentration of carbon dioxide in the air is higher, plants become more efficient in pulling the gas out of the air. This allows the plants to process the gas more quickly. Faster conversion of carbon dioxide into sugars and other organic materials translates into faster plant growth. There are many plants that won't benefit from higher carbon dioxide concentrations. These plants have certain tissues in their leaves that concentrate carbon dioxide over time. Since the gas is already concentrated inside the plant, a higher availability of carbon dioxide in the air won't make a difference. (McGill)
Photosynthesis. During photosynthesis, plants use sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose (sugar) and oxygen. This process is essential for producing food for plants and providing oxygen for other living organisms.
carbon dioxide is a air which comes from the plants