Chloroplasts in plants trap sunlight or light energy. They use this during photosynthesis. Carbon dioxide also traps the suns energy and that is why it is a greenhouse.
Yes
The process by which autotrophs trap energy from sunlight is called photosynthesis. This is possible because of the chloroplasts inside an autotrophs cells.
They use chlorophyll to trap energy.Pigments absorb energy from sunlight.
Chloroplasts need energy for photosynthesis. It takes this energy from light
No, chlorophyll does not trap glucose from sunlight. Chlorophyll is a pigment found in chloroplasts that absorbs light energy for photosynthesis. During photosynthesis, chlorophyll captures light energy and converts it into chemical energy in the form of glucose, not by trapping existing glucose from sunlight.
The chlorophyll pigments inside chloroplast trap sunlight during photosynthesis.
No, fungi do not trap sunlight energy in the form of carbohydrates. Unlike plants, which use photosynthesis to convert sunlight into energy, fungi are heterotrophic organisms that obtain their nutrients by decomposing organic matter or forming symbiotic relationships with other organisms. They absorb nutrients from their surroundings rather than producing their own through sunlight.
It captures the energy from the sunlight and stores it in chemical bonds.
they trap sunlight and use the energy to make food
Chlorophyll is the green pigment which traps sunlight. This pigment is contained in the chloroplasts.
choloroplast
The unit of hundreds of chlorophyll molecules that trap the energy of sunlight is typically referred to as a "photosystem." In plants, these photosystems, primarily Photosystem I and Photosystem II, contain clusters of chlorophyll molecules that work together to capture light energy during photosynthesis.