Sucrose.
Disaccharide
glucose and fructose can be combined into the disaccharide sucrose
Sucrose is formed by glucose and fructose.
Sugar molecules are formed through a process called photosynthesis in plants, where carbon dioxide and water are converted into glucose and fructose using sunlight as an energy source. These simple sugars can then be combined to form more complex sugars like sucrose, which are essential for providing energy to living organisms.
Monosaccharides are the simplest form of carbohydrates, consisting of single sugar molecules such as glucose and fructose. Disaccharides are formed when two monosaccharides are linked together by a glycosidic bond, like sucrose (glucose + fructose) and lactose (glucose + galactose).
A disaccharide is formed when two simple sugars combine through a condensation reaction, resulting in the formation of a glycosidic linkage. Examples of disaccharides include sucrose (glucose + fructose), lactose (glucose + galactose), and maltose (glucose + glucose).
Yes, sucrose is a disaccharide composed of glucose and fructose units joined together. This bond forms through a condensation reaction between the two monosaccharides, resulting in the formation of a glycosidic bond. Sucrose is commonly known as table sugar and is found naturally in fruits and plants.
Maltose, Trehalose and Cellobiose are all formed solely from glucose molecules. Less common disaccharides of glucose include: Kojibiose, Nigerose, Isomaltose, β,β-Trehalose, α,β-Trehalose, Sophorose, Laminaribiose and Gentiobiose.
C6H12O6 This is glucose and not only a carbohydrate ( consisting of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen ) by a sugar technically called a monosaccharide.
That would be sucrose (the stuff you use in baking and maybe sprinkle on your cereal)
disaccharide
Carbohydrate or Disaccharides, like fructose
when sucrose is broken down in a body, it is changed into glucose. this works the same way with fructose, which also becomes glucose. acid will probably act as some sort of a catalyst or maybe it helps break it down.