Cornstarch
fermenting glucose and yeast produces beer and wine.
Photosynthesis produces glucose as the main end product. Cellulose is a structural carbohydrate that is synthesized from glucose by plants using enzymes and additional chemical processes.
Two glucose, because maltose is two glucose join together
Photosynthesis produces glucose (C6H12O6) which is required by organisms for respiration, it also gives off bi-products of O2 and water, the oxygen is released into the atmosphere or recycled by the plant in its own respiration reactions.
Cellular respiration produces water but fermentation does not.Respiration: glucose + oxygen --> carbon dioxide + water Fermentation: glucose --> alcohol + carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide is a product of cellular respiration but not fermentation. Fermentation produces alcohol or lactic acid as end products.
The substrate is Glucose-1-phospate which is broken down by only Phosphorylase and produces Starch as its end product
Photosynthetic reactions remove the oxygen atoms from water (H20) and turn them into free oxygen gas (02). So yes, photosynthesis produces oxygen as a (waste) product, its primary product is glucose to provide "food" for the plant. Yes.
Glucose = C6 h12 o6
The stored starch is a by-product of photosynthesis. Photosynthesis produces glucose; plants can convert and store excess glucose as starch. Both sugar and starch are types of carbohydrates.
Chloroplasts produce water as a by-product during photosynthesis. This process involves the conversion of carbon dioxide and water into glucose and oxygen, with oxygen being released as a waste product.
The process of cellular respiration produces carbon dioxide as a waste product. During cellular respiration, cells break down glucose to release energy, with carbon dioxide being produced as a byproduct.