In the context of Biology and ecology, "take in" refers to the process of organisms assimilating nutrients and energy from their environment for growth, metabolism, and other life processes. This can involve the ingestion of food, absorption of nutrients, or capturing of sunlight by plants through photosynthesis.
The type of energy transfer that can take place with little or no matter present is radiation.
Mass and energy always have locations in both time and space; the amount of space that they take up depends upon their density, but they do take up some. Since energy is often associated with matter (heat, kinetic energy etc.) it would be the matter that takes up the space. The energy would be in the same space as the matter. But energy can also exist independently of matter (such as a photon of light travelling in space) and in that case, the energy takes up space.
Yes, according to the law of conservation of energy, energy is always involved whenever matter is moved or changed. This energy can take various forms such as kinetic, potential, thermal, or chemical energy.
No, conduction requires the presence of matter for energy to be transferred. Energy transfer by conduction occurs through direct contact between particles in a material, so without matter, conduction cannot take place.
No, a change in matter can't take place without energy being released or absorbed? Why? Well, this is because every chemical or physical change in matter includes a change in energy. You can't change matter without a change in energy. Energy is the ability to do work or cause change. Hope you find this helpful. And yes, this answer has been approved by my science teacher.
Matter does not take up less space when energy is added to it. This is because energy is not a physical unity and therefore it does not interfere with the occupancy of space by matter.
Food
The type of energy transfer that can take place with little or no matter present is radiation.
Mass and energy always have locations in both time and space; the amount of space that they take up depends upon their density, but they do take up some. Since energy is often associated with matter (heat, kinetic energy etc.) it would be the matter that takes up the space. The energy would be in the same space as the matter. But energy can also exist independently of matter (such as a photon of light travelling in space) and in that case, the energy takes up space.
Yes, according to the law of conservation of energy, energy is always involved whenever matter is moved or changed. This energy can take various forms such as kinetic, potential, thermal, or chemical energy.
Yes.
They obtain energy in much the same way as people do. They take organic matter called detritus, and take the chemical potential energy out of it.
No. Matter is anything that has mass and takes up space (has volume). Energy has no mass and does not take up space, therefore it is not matter.
No, conduction requires the presence of matter for energy to be transferred. Energy transfer by conduction occurs through direct contact between particles in a material, so without matter, conduction cannot take place.
None of these. It is energy. It is not matter. But according to the law of relativity, energy can be converted into matter.
Matter and energy are two aspects of the same thing and are related according to Einstein's equation: E = mc2 where E = amount of Energy m = mass (amount of matter) c = the speed of light in vacuum
yes