it creates combustion hope that helped
Carbon dioxide molecules enter the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis through tiny pores on the underside of leaves called stomata. Once inside the leaf, carbon dioxide diffuses into the chloroplasts where it participates in the Calvin cycle to produce sugars.
Producers use carbon dioxide in photosynthesis to convert it into glucose and other carbon-containing molecules. This process involves capturing energy from sunlight to drive the chemical reactions that transform carbon dioxide into organic compounds.
No, carbon dioxide is not typically used as rocket fuel. Rocket fuels are usually composed of more energetic compounds, such as liquid hydrogen or hydrazine, that can undergo combustion reactions to produce thrust. Carbon dioxide is a product of combustion rather than a fuel itself.
Plants, algae, and some bacteria are known to take in carbon dioxide through the process of photosynthesis. In this biological process, carbon dioxide is used by these organisms to produce energy and organic compounds.
Trees absorb carbon dioxide during photosynthesis to produce energy and grow. They use the carbon dioxide to produce glucose (sugar) and release oxygen as a byproduct. This process helps to remove carbon from the atmosphere and store it in the tree's biomass.
Other combustion reactions that would produce carbon dioxide and water vapor include burning natural gas (methane), gasoline, wood, and propane. In each of these reactions, the fuel combines with oxygen to undergo combustion, resulting in the production of carbon dioxide and water vapor as byproducts.
it is a product
No, helium does not produce carbon dioxide. Helium is an inert gas and does not react chemically with other substances to produce carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is produced from the combustion of carbon-containing compounds.
Carbon dioxide molecules enter the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis through tiny pores on the underside of leaves called stomata. Once inside the leaf, carbon dioxide diffuses into the chloroplasts where it participates in the Calvin cycle to produce sugars.
Yes, forest fires do produce carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide levels influence how many sugars(glucose) a plant can produce greatly. This is because 6 molecules of water and 6 molecules of carbon dioxide will release a sugar through series of reactions. So if you have many carbon dioxide molecules it makes it a lot easier for a plant or any other photoautotroph.
That's correct. Combustion reactions can produce other products in addition to water and carbon dioxide, depending on the specific fuel and conditions of the reaction. For example, incomplete combustion can result in the formation of carbon monoxide or soot, while combustion of sulfur-containing fuels can produce sulfur dioxide.
The carbon atoms used to produce sugars during photosynthesis primarily come from carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Plants take in carbon dioxide through small openings in their leaves called stomata, and then use the energy from sunlight to convert the carbon dioxide into sugars through a series of biochemical reactions.
Animals produce carbon dioxide. Animals produce carbon dioxide
No, carbon dioxide is generally produced by some kind of combustion or oxidation reaction that does not require light (but which may produce light, if it is fire). Photosynthesis is the most important type of light dependent reaction, and it consumes carbon dioxide, rather than producing it.
the Krebs cycle
the Krebs cycle