They use the energy of light.This energy is stored in glucose.
Chloroplasts do not produce energy.They convert light energy into chemical energy.
Chloroplasts in green plants use carbon dioxide during photosynthesis to produce glucose (a type of sugar), which serves as energy and building material for the plant. This process also releases oxygen as a byproduct.
A cell with chloroplasts is likely specialized for photosynthesis, as chloroplasts are responsible for converting light energy into sugar through the process of photosynthesis. This type of cell would typically be found in plant cells or some protists.
Plants use light energy from the sun to produce sugar through the process of photosynthesis. This energy is captured by pigments in the plant's chloroplasts, which convert it into chemical energy that is used to fuel the production of glucose.
Photosynthesis takes place in chloroplasts, which have chlorophyll in them. Chlorophyll absorbs the sunlight. From sunlight, green plants combine carbon dioxide and water to make sugar and oxygen.
Cells with chloroplasts.
Chlorophyll, the green pigment found in the chloroplasts of plant cells, gathers solar energy during photosynthesis. This process converts sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water into glucose (a type of sugar) and oxygen. The glucose produced serves as food for the plant, providing energy for growth and development. Thus, chlorophyll is essential for plants to harness solar energy and produce their own food.
Sun light
plant cells use chloroplasts to get energy from the sun by the green pigments inside of them called chlorophyll.
the plant would wither up and die because the plant's chloroplasts are the nutrient makers in a plant
im guessing a type of energy and monosaccharides....
Light energy, of which mostly comes from the sun - thereby solar energy.