the stoma
Calvin cycle
The stroma
It is the cytoplasm of chloroplast. It is called as stroma
The Calvin cycle, which is the process of carbon fixation in photosynthesis, occurs in the stroma of the chloroplast. This is where the enzymes and molecules involved in the cycle are located, allowing for the conversion of carbon dioxide into glucose.
The Calvin cycle takes place in the granum part of the chloroplast.
It cannot occur in the dark. It contains an enzyme called rubisco which is a light-activated enzyme. Also the Calvin cycle uses the chemical energy produced in the light reactions, and the light reactions need sunlight energy in order to produce the energy needed in the Calvin cycle. Hope that helps :)
The Calvin cycle is the part of photosynthesis that produces glucose by fixing carbon dioxide into organic molecules. In this process, ADP is converted to ATP to provide energy for the synthesis of glucose.
the Calvin cycle
The production of glucose takes place during the light independent reactions (Calvin cycle) in the Stroma.
In photosynthesis, the the electron transport chain is part of the light dependent reactions. The "light independent reactions" are the Calvin-Benson cycle and do not include an electron transport chain, but the Calvin Cycle cannot proceed without the ATP and NADPH produced during the light reactions.
No, the Calvin cycle is not a part of cellular respiration. It is a series of reactions that take place in the chloroplasts of plants during photosynthesis to convert carbon dioxide into glucose. Cellular respiration occurs in the mitochondria and is the process by which cells generate energy from glucose.
No, PS I and PS II are part of the first stage of photosynthesis, the light reactions. The Calvin cycle is the second stage of photosynthesis and does utilize the photosystems.