Want this question answered?
On a sunny day because there is more sun to help produce oxygen
Green plant life. Carbon dioxide in absorbed by green plant leaf. It undergoes photosynthesis in the plant; the oxygen is released back into the atmosphere and the carbon is retained in the plant as biomass. It is part of the Carbon / Oxygen cycle.
you mix plant-sun=oxygen
All plant and animal live requires oxygen to survive
the carbon dioxide oxygen cycle is how a human breathes out carbon dioxide and it goes to a plant and the plant breathes out oxygen and it goes to the human and that's how they get energy
On a sunny day because there is more sun to help produce oxygen
On a sunny day because there is more sun to help produce oxygen
On a sunny day because there is more sun to help produce oxygen
On a sunny day because there is more sun to help produce oxygen
no because it need more sun light than cloud/ In cloudy conditions, the light will become a limiting factor hence the amount of oxygen produced on a sunny day will be more than on a cloudy day.
no because it need more sun light than cloud/ In cloudy conditions, the light will become a limiting factor hence the amount of oxygen produced on a sunny day will be more than on a cloudy day.
Any plant will produce more O2 on a sunny day than a cloudy day, since more sunlight hitting the plant means more energy to produce more oxygen via photosynthesis. Photosynthesis is a biochemical process that turns sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide into sugar, oxygen, and ATP.
When it is cloudy the whole day, it is very likely to have rain. If there is rain, that would be good for the plant to have water. The plant would need sunlight so that means you need to wait until it is sunny. But if the weather barely is sunny everyday, it might die.
Candle burns oxygen. Plant produces oxygen from Carbon Dioxide. plant produces oxygen, which is burned by candle. Candle lasts longer because more oxygen is present
Venus
The rate at which oxygen is released from the plant will decrease.
plant more trees