The overall products of respiration are carbon dioxide and water.
The overall products of photosynthesis are glucose and oxygen.
The chemical equation for cellular respiration is the reverse of the equation for photosynthesis. In cellular respiration, glucose and oxygen are used to produce carbon dioxide, water, and energy in the form of ATP. In photosynthesis, carbon dioxide and water are used with sunlight to produce glucose and oxygen. The two processes are interconnected as they represent opposite reactions in the cycle of energy conversion in living organisms.
CO2 serves as an end product that is released from body tissues (cells) after cellular respiration is used to release the energy from an ATP molecule.
The two chemical reactions essentially form a cycle, in that the products of one reaction fuel the other. CO2 and H2O released from cellular respiration reenter the atmosphere and are recycled by photosynthetic organisms, which in turn produce the sugars and oxygen needed for respiration to occur once more. This is right! :) Follow me on twitter! @diamondiemeary twitter.com/diamondiemeary myspace.com/diemeary
The end products of fermentation are lactic acid, ethanol, and carbon dioxide. In cellular respiration, the end products are carbon dioxide, water, and ATP (energy).
Yes, the two are opposites of each other. Photosynthesis builds up complex sugars that have a lot of stored energy while cellular respiration breaks down these sugars, release the energy and store it in the form of ATP. The products and wastes of one process end up as the reactants for the other process.
NO! It is not, it is an end product of cellular respiration.
Photosynthesis yeilds carbohydrate and O2.Respiration yeild ATP and CO2.
Carbon dioxide, in photosynthesis, is a reactant, or "raw material" and in cellular respiration, is a product or end product, so it is really either, but the answer to the question according to the category is a "raw material."
Because the end products of photosynthesis (glucose and oxygen) are the requirement to start cellular respiration.
Carbon dioxide, in photosynthesis, is a reactant, or "raw material" and in cellular respiration, is a product or end product, so it is really either, but the answer to the question according to the category is a "raw material."
Photosynthesis' products are the same as the reactants of cellular respiration. In other words photosynthesis makes what cellular respiration uses.
the end product of photosynthesis is sucrose which is converted to glucose. this glucose is used in respiration to producepyruvic acid..
Glucose is the product of photosynthesis and oxygen is the by product of the photosynthesis. And are used in the process of photo respiration.
the raw materials is water and oxygenthe end product is carbon dioxide and glucose
Photosynthesis emmits oxygen as end product Like that respiration release carbon dioxide.
C6H12O6 (glucose) is relevant to both of these processes, because... Glucose is the end product of photosynthesis. After generating ATP and NADPH from the "light reactions" in the electron transport chain, both these molecules (ATP and NADPH) go on to power the Calvin Cycle, or "dark reaction". The end product of the Calvin Cycle is a molecule of G3P, which is made into glucose. Cellular respiration is essentially the "inverse" of photosynthesis- where photosynthesis makes glucose, cellular respiration breaks it down into ATP, so that it might be used by the cell. There is aerobic and anaerobic cellular respiration, which occur differently, but the common goal of the two processes is to break down glucose. Glycolysis precedes cellular respiration itself, which is the actual process of breaking down the glucose molecules into pyruvate.
No, pyruvic acid is not considered an end product of aerobic cellular respiration. In aerobic respiration, pyruvic acid is further oxidized to produce carbon dioxide and water in the citric acid cycle and the electron transport chain.