cellular respiration
Respiration is used to break down glucose into ATP. The whole process is completed in two steps. First is gycolysis, which is completed in the cytoplasm and the other is Kreb's cycle, completed in mitochondria.
Respiration is used to break down glucose into ATP. The whole process is completed in two steps. First is gycolysis, which is completed in the cytoplasm and the other is Kreb's cycle, completed in mitochondria.
Once the glucose has entered the cell, it begins the process of conversion. Glucose is converted producing both heat and ATP as by-products
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Light energy is captured by the chloroplast, then, glucose is produced and then consumed, so it's a usable chemical energy available in the cell.
when you break the bonds of the glucose molecule you get energy.
No glucose molecules
They are the 'power houses' of the cell. They take in glucose and then convert it into usable energy.
Once the glucose has entered the cell, it begins the process of conversion. Glucose is converted producing both heat and ATP as by-products
Cellular Respiration is the process in which a Cell turns Glucose into ATP. Both glucose and oils are fed into the Kreb's citric acid cycle - one CH2 'monomer' at a time - and Atp is prodigiously produced. So the basic Answer is that the Cell turns glucose into biochemically usable energy.
The Mitochondria in a cell breaks down the Glucose
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The mitochondria are organelles in cells that produce ATP a usable energy source for the cell from glucose.
Light energy is captured by the chloroplast, then, glucose is produced and then consumed, so it's a usable chemical energy available in the cell.
when you break the bonds of the glucose molecule you get energy.
glucose molecules will diffuse out of the cell. apex
Most organisms break down sugar to produce usable energy through the process of cellular respiration.
Glucose
The process by which the glucose get past the cell wall is osmosis which includes the transmission a substance from higher concentration to lower concentration.