Cell Plant uses chlorophyll to make glucose or sugar
it really depends on what kind of cell but if it is it will be 6x1000 and that will your answer because i read that cell divide at least 1000 times
Animal cells - this is wrong answer Plant cells containing chloroplasts produce glucose by photosynthesis.
Prokaryote cells have cell walls, but no chloroplast. An example of a prokaryote is bacteria.
plant cells, those containing chlorophyll.
by diffusion and passive transportation
Mitochondria is an organelle of the cell where as the chloroplast is a kind of plastids.... mitochondria is found in plants and animals both where as chloroplasts are found only in plants... Mitochondria is the power house of cell where cellular respiration takes place and chloroplast is a green pigment especially in leaves that helps it for photosynthesis called chlorophyll. hope its helpful!! ^_^
Many people say it is found in the chloroplast, when it is actually found in the Thylakoid Membrane. The link below should bring you straight to a picture of the cell, that in the bottom middle shows the thylakoid.http://www.bigelow.org/foodweb/plant_cell.jpg
When a seaweed photosynthesize (make food), using carbon dioxide, chlorophyll, light energy from the sun and water, the product of the whole photosynthesis process is oxygen and glucose. Glucose is the food for the photosynthesis. If there are extra glucose, it is stored as starch in some parts of the plant, depending on what kind of plant it is. The oxygen is released into the surroundings into the sea.
Chlorophyll is a green chemical, so therefore pretty much anything green.
autotrophic
In very general terms, chlorophyll pigments capture light energy. Depending on what kind of chlorophyll they are and if they are in Photosystem I or Photosystem II they will have different specific functions.
An example of Chlorophyll is the green in the Chloroplasts of plant species to aid in the process of photosynthesis.