True.
The term is aerobic.
Cellular respiration is called an aerobic process because it requires oxygen to produce energy in the form of ATP. The final stages of cellular respiration, the electron transport chain and oxidative phosphorylation, can only occur in the presence of oxygen. The term "aerobic" refers to the use of oxygen in a process.
aerobic respiration basically its first step is called glycolysis and is further divded in two forms either aerobic which occur in presence of o2 and anaerobic in absences of oxygen Exactly so to answer the question the process the REQUIRES O2 is aerobic respiration like i said.
Anaerobic means:living, active, occurring, or existing in the absence of free oxygen, orrelating to, or being activity in which the body incurs an oxygen debt
Combustibility is the term for a material's ability to burn in the presence of oxygen.
It depends--there are both aerobic (oxygen-dependent or oxygen-tolerating) and anaerobic (oxygen-intolerant) bacteria. Anaerobic bacteria often cannot live in the presence of oxygen, while increasing oxygen levels for aerobic bacteria can often stimulate population growth.
air or oxygen
The overall equation for (one of the many fermentations which is probably considered the simplest called lactic acid) fermentation is: C6H12O6->2CH3CHOHCOOH or one molecule of water and lactose produces four lactic acid molecules. These processes are the homolactic fermentation. The heterolactic fermentation is : C6H12O6-> CH3CHOHCOOH + C2H5OH +CO2 aerobic respiration proceeds as follows: C6H12O6 + O6 (g) -> 6 CO2 (g) + 6 H2O (l) + energy (heat) This reaction is spontaneous due to the change in G, or Gibb's free energy. The anaerobic process is simply an aerobic respiration using another redox chemical in the place of Oxygen.
Flammability
Flammability
The term used to indicate the presence of multiple thrombi is "thrombi" or "thromboses" (plural form of thrombus).
Flammability