Oxygen exits the plant through the stomata. Water vapors also exits through the stomata.
humans breathe in oxygen and we let out carbon dioxide , a plant breathes in carbon dioxide and lets out oxygen the stoma , which is a pore , lets out gases and takes in gases
Oxygen leaves a plant through the plants leaves, and then is in the atmosphere.
pores in the leaf
thru the leaf or leaves
through the stomata?
It leaves through the stomata vis
NO!!! However, green plant life growing out of the soil does. A green leaf plant takes in carbon dioxide. Under the process of photosynthesis ( uv/sun light is needed), the plant breaks down the carbon dioxide, into its component elements. The carbon component remains in the plant as biomass. The oxygen component is released back intoi the atmosphere. This maintains the oxygen level in the atmosphere, at about 20%. It is a natural process that humans neither hear, see nor smell, so short of scientific invesigation we cannot tell how fast it procedes. However, it must go on at a fast rate in order to remove CO2 from the atmosphere and replace it with oxygen. In chemistry/biochemistry/geochemistry ,there are three cycles going on all the time. they are the nitrogen cycle, oxygen cycle and carbon cycle. I'll leave you to investigate these cycles.
The nitrogen goes into the nodules of the plant.
The nitrogen goes into the nodules of the plant.
Based on how oxygen flows, the higher you start to go up into the atmosphere the thinner the oxygen is and the harder it is to breath. You start to notice a difference at an altitude of 8,000 feet.
Burning of magnesium (or anything else) requires continuing combination with oxygen. If a burning piece of magnesium is transferred to an atmosphere of nitrogen, no additional magnesium can react with oxygen because none is available for reaction.
NO!!! However, green plant life growing out of the soil does. A green leaf plant takes in carbon dioxide. Under the process of photosynthesis ( uv/sun light is needed), the plant breaks down the carbon dioxide, into its component elements. The carbon component remains in the plant as biomass. The oxygen component is released back intoi the atmosphere. This maintains the oxygen level in the atmosphere, at about 20%. It is a natural process that humans neither hear, see nor smell, so short of scientific invesigation we cannot tell how fast it procedes. However, it must go on at a fast rate in order to remove CO2 from the atmosphere and replace it with oxygen. In chemistry/biochemistry/geochemistry ,there are three cycles going on all the time. they are the nitrogen cycle, oxygen cycle and carbon cycle. I'll leave you to investigate these cycles.
It stays in the air.. It doesn't leave the atmosphere.
If you mean 'breathe' out, then no. They take in carbon dioxide, and with the presence of water, go through photosynthesis and convert it into oxygen and carbohydrates, which they then release into the atmosphere.
The nitrogen goes into the nodules of the plant.
The nitrogen goes into the nodules of the plant.
The nitrogen goes into the nodules of the plant.
No, a hydrogen ions separates. H2O --> H+ + OH-
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When a plant takes all inorganic and organic materials out it's environment. That material is change with light energy to a organic element called glucose which leaves the chloroplasts and is change to be used by the plant
carbon dioxide
The nitrogen goes into the nodules of the plant.
Oxygen (O2) goes to ur blood and carbon dioxide (CO2) goes back to the atmosphere.