I believe they are incorporated through photosynthesis reactions. Due to this, they may also be incorportated through cell respiration.
I hope that's right!
Carbon Fixation
carbon fixation
CO2 is fixed or incorporated into organic molecules.
Hydrogen, ATP and CO2
Essentially, yes. All the organic compounds contain carbon but all the carbon containing compounds are not essentially organic as CO, CO2, KCN, NaHCO3, CaCO3.
Burning combines Carbon and Oxygen gas from organic materia. The resulting CO2 molecules are more stable, that is, less energy, because they are stronger.
CO2
CO2 is fixed or incorporated into organic molecules.
Organic molecules
Hydrogen, ATP and CO2
CO2 is called Carbon Dioxide because it has 2 Oxygen molecules.
1 mole CO2 = 6.022 x 1023 molecules 2.4mol CO2 x 6.022 x 1023 molecules CO2/1mol CO2 = 1.4 x 1024 molecules CO2
It evolves CO2 when burnt. Kerosene is made up of C and H
Essentially, yes. All the organic compounds contain carbon but all the carbon containing compounds are not essentially organic as CO, CO2, KCN, NaHCO3, CaCO3.
During the second stage of photosynthesis, also called the Calvin Cycle, CO2 is used to turn organic molecules into sugar.
Glycolysis
autotrophs gain carbon via CO2. Heterotrophs gain carbon by consuming organic molecules.
Carbon is present in most of the non water molecules in the human body. Glucose, the primary energy source of cells has carbon, fat is carbon rich, the membranes that make up cells are made of lipids, which have carbon in them.
carbonic anhydrase fixes co2 in organic form