it requires energy to be lost from the downhill movement of the excited electron from photosystem 2 to photosystem 1.
the energy lost is coupled to ATP formation
The production of ATP in photosynthesis is called the Calvin Cycle.
Glycolysis produces ATP in plants to power cellular processes. Photosynthesis harnesses the energy from the sun and stores it in glucose molecules.
The chemiosmotic production of ATP through photophosphorylation in photosynthesis is closely related to the chemiosmotic production of ATP through oxidative phosphorylation in cellular respiration. Both processes utilize a proton gradient across a membrane to power the ATP synthase which phosphorylates ADP into ATP.
Protons are pumped across the thylakoid membrane, where they flow back through ATP synthase which synthesizes ATP.
In plant leaves, chloroplasts make the green pigment chlorophyll. This is the substance that can extract energy from sunlight. Plants use the energy to create glucose and oxygen from the raw materials carbon dioxide and water. In plant leaves, this takes place in a layer called the mesophyll.
chemiosmosis
Glycolysis produces ATP in plants to power cellular processes. Photosynthesis harnesses the energy from the sun and stores it in glucose molecules.
The chemiosmotic production of ATP through photophosphorylation in photosynthesis is closely related to the chemiosmotic production of ATP through oxidative phosphorylation in cellular respiration. Both processes utilize a proton gradient across a membrane to power the ATP synthase which phosphorylates ADP into ATP.
mitochondria and chloroplast
These are called chloroplasts and are utilized in photosynthesis to produce energy (ATP).
The Mitochondria of an animal cell is responsible for producing ATP in an animal while the Chloroplast of a plant cell is responsible for producing ATP in a plant. More specifically, for plants, the Glucose which is produced in the light stage of photosynthesis (C6H12O6) is responsible for the production of adenine triphosphate (ATP), which is where a plant gets the energy to produce food in the dark stage of photosynthesis. The answer you are looking for is Glucose. The Glucose molecule is most responsible for the production of ATP.
Protons are pumped across the thylakoid membrane, where they flow back through ATP synthase which synthesizes ATP.
In plant leaves, chloroplasts make the green pigment chlorophyll. This is the substance that can extract energy from sunlight. Plants use the energy to create glucose and oxygen from the raw materials carbon dioxide and water. In plant leaves, this takes place in a layer called the mesophyll.
Respiration is the process that most animals usually rely on most for its production of the ATP molecules. Plants on the other hand rely on photosynthesis.
They both use ATP synthase proteins in ATP production
chemiosmosis
its the photosynthesis
Photosynthesis can be divided into two part: light reaction is the first stage of photosynthesis, occurring only in the presence of light, during which energy captured from light drives the production of ATP. dark reaction is the second stage of photosynthesis, not requiring light to occur, and during which energy released from ATP drives the production of organic molecules from carbon dioxide.