The gel-filled space inside the chloroplast surrounding the thylakoid stack is called the stroma.
No, the stroma is not located within the thylakoid membrane. The stroma is the fluid-filled space outside the thylakoid membranes in the chloroplast.
The accumulation of protons occurs in the thylakoid space within the chloroplast during photosynthetic electron transport. This forms a proton gradient that drives ATP synthesis during the process of photophosphorylation.
The function of the chloroplast inner membrane in photosynthesis is to separate the stroma (fluid-filled space) from the thylakoid membrane system, where light-dependent reactions occur. This separation allows for the creation of a proton gradient that drives ATP synthesis during photosynthesis.
a thick fluid inside chloroplasts
The dark reactions of photosynthesis, also known as the Calvin cycle, take place in the stroma of the chloroplasts in plant cells. Here, carbon dioxide is fixed and converted into glucose with the help of ATP and NADPH produced during the light reactions.
No, the stroma is not located within the thylakoid membrane. The stroma is the fluid-filled space outside the thylakoid membranes in the chloroplast.
The stroma and grana are portions of a chloroplast. The stroma is the fluid-filled space surrounding the thylakoid membranes where the Calvin cycle reactions occur, while the grana are stacks of thylakoid membranes where light-dependent reactions take place through the presence of chlorophyll.
The chlorophyll pigment is located within the thylakoid membrane and the space between the thylakoid and the chloroplast membrane.
No, chlorophyll is located in the thylakoid membranes within the chloroplasts, not in the stroma. The stroma is the fluid-filled space surrounding the thylakoid membranes where the Calvin cycle takes place.
The parts of a chloroplast are thylakoid, grana, inner membrane, outer membrane, intermembrane space, stroma, and stroma.
The light reactions occur in the thylakoid space, which can also be called the granum.
The accumulation of protons occurs in the thylakoid space within the chloroplast during photosynthetic electron transport. This forms a proton gradient that drives ATP synthesis during the process of photophosphorylation.
The dark reactions of photosynthesis, specifically the Calvin cycle, take place in the stroma of the chloroplast. The stroma is the fluid-filled space surrounding the thylakoid membranes where the light-independent reactions occur to produce sugars using ATP and NADPH generated during the light reactions.
The chloroplast is the hydrogen ion concentration is highest in the spaces of its thylakoid membrane. The ions get pushed into these spaces during the transportation of electrons.
The function of the chloroplast inner membrane in photosynthesis is to separate the stroma (fluid-filled space) from the thylakoid membrane system, where light-dependent reactions occur. This separation allows for the creation of a proton gradient that drives ATP synthesis during photosynthesis.
The parts of a chloroplast are thylakoid, grana, inner membrane, outer membrane, intermembrane space, stroma, and stroma.
the stroma, consisting of set of flat disc like sacs called thylakoid. The thylakoid membrane encloses a fluid filled lumen or space, which is separated by thylakoid membrane with stroma. The chlorophyll is embedded in the thylakoid membrane. Chlorophyll absorbs light and converts it into chemical energy of ATP and NADPH; the products which synthesize carbohydrate in the stroma of chloroplast. But photosynthetic prokaryotes lack chloroplast all together in their cells. So, for carbohydrate synthesizing, they do have unstacked photosynthetic membranes, which work like thylakoid.