Animals don't eat sunlight so that cell part doesn't exist in an animal. But in a plant it is th chloroplast.
Leaf captures sunlight
The chlorophyll in the chloroplasts of PLANT cells does this.
The question is a bit vague. Id guess any cell with chloroplasts uses sunlight to make food. Generally speaking, any part of the plant that is green, and above ground.
In most plants, the leaf. In other plants like cacti (the Cactus) the green part of the plant itself captures sunlight to make food.
the chloroplasts inside the cell absorbs sunlight
the part of gthe cell which supports the animal cell is the cell membrane
Chloroplasts are the cell structures in plants that use sunlight to produce food through a process called photosynthesis. Within the chloroplasts, chlorophyll captures sunlight energy and converts it into chemical energy, which is used to make carbohydrates such as glucose.
it's an animal cell as it is part of an animal body
The part of a plant that captures the sun's sunlight is called a leaf. Leaves contain chlorophyll, a pigment that absorbs sunlight and helps in the process of photosynthesis, where plants convert sunlight into energy.
The organelle is chloroplasts Chloroplasts also contain the chemical chlorophyll, which gives leaves their green color and help in capturing the sunlight and converting it to glucose for the plant.
Yes there is a nucleus in an animal cell.
The outermost structure of an animal cell is the cell membrane. The cell membrane is the membrane separating the interior of the cell from the outside environment. It is made up of proteins and lipids.