Sugar is glucose (C6H12O6) (Oh, I wish I could make the numbers small) Which means it has (per particle) 6 Carbon atoms, 12 Hydrogen atoms and 6 Oxygen atoms.
Pentose sugar has 5 carbon atoms if that's what your asking..!(:
The organic molecule that undergoes glycolysis is the sugar glucose which contains 6 atoms of carbon per molecule.
No, simple sugars do not contain as many carbon atoms as oxygen atoms. Simple sugars, like glucose or fructose, have the chemical formula C6H12O6, which means they have 6 carbon atoms, 12 hydrogen atoms, and 6 oxygen atoms.
A molecule of of water contain 3 atoms.
The chemical formula for sugar depends on the type of sugar. The formula for common table sugar, sucrose, is C12H22O11. This means it is composed of 12 carbon atoms, 22 hydrogen atoms, and 11 oxygen atoms.
Pentose sugar has 5 carbon atoms if that's what your asking..!(:
The organic molecule that undergoes glycolysis is the sugar glucose which contains 6 atoms of carbon per molecule.
45 atoms
No, simple sugars do not contain as many carbon atoms as oxygen atoms. Simple sugars, like glucose or fructose, have the chemical formula C6H12O6, which means they have 6 carbon atoms, 12 hydrogen atoms, and 6 oxygen atoms.
A molecule of of water contain 3 atoms.
A molecule contain atoms.
Sugar has three different types of atoms: carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.
probably 3 because H2O. 2 Hydrogen and only one Oxygen. 2+1=3.
3
It depends on the sugar. The monosaccharides glucose, fructose, and galactose have the molecular formula C6H12O6, and therefore have 6 carbon atoms, 12 hydrogen atoms, and 6 oxygen atoms per molecule. The disaccharides sucrose and maltose have the molecular formula C12H22O11, and therefore have 12 carbon atoms, 22 hydrogen atoms, and 11 oxygen atoms per molecules.
135. The empirical formula for sucrose (table sugar) is C12H22O11, for 45 atoms per sucrose molecule.
there are 11 atoms