Macromolecules
It comes as chemical energy. Also it leaves as same
it comes from foood like buiscuitand other protein food.
No. The cell's energy comes from the mitochondria, which are the site of aerobic cellular respiration.
The inputs, or reactants are oxygen and high energy sugars, such as sugar. After respiration, carbon dioxide, water, and ATP (energy) is produced. trust point please =D
No. A cell's energy comes from the mitochondria, which are the site of aerobic cellular respiration.
Cellular Respiration releases chemical energy from sugars and other carbon based moecules to mae ATP when oxygen is present. It is an aerobic process. As for where the energy comes from, the Krebs cycle jumps in.The Krebs Cycle produces molecules that carry energy to the second part of cellular respiration. Hope this helped! -Biology Textbook
Oxygen. Water vapor. Carbon dioxide, if you are a plant...
You can measure the energy content by analyzing the ATP produced during cellular respiration. If there is less ATP produced than the energy contained in the initial reactants, it indicates a loss of energy. The energy released during respiration comes from the breakdown of glucose molecules and is stored in the high-energy bonds of ATP molecules.
yes respiration does
It is called the respiration. Aerobic respiration takes place in it
Glucose comes from sugar in food. Oxygen comes from air we breath in. Water comes from water we drink. Carbon dioxide comes from gas we breath out. Enery comes from glucose absorbed in the small intestine.
In heterotrophs, energy for life processes comes from the chemical energy stored in the bonds of organic molecules, such as carbohydrates, fats, and proteins. This energy is released through processes like cellular respiration to fuel cellular activities.