If you're talking about your everyday plant like grass and trees, the answer is all plants. If you're talking about plants like factories, then any eco-friendly plant that relies on solar panels for power.
Plants use the energy from the sun to make glucose.
Plants use energy from the sun.
The Sun by photosynthesis's!
The sun is the ultimate source of energy in living things since plants use sunlight to make glucose and other animals use the glucose by eating the plants.
The process that uses the sun's energy to make glucose is called photosynthesis. During photosynthesis, plants capture sunlight and convert it into chemical energy, which is used to combine carbon dioxide and water to produce glucose and oxygen. This process is essential for the survival of plants and many other living organisms.
All of a plants energy comes from the sun and is converted in a proces called photosynthesis.
Yea Photosynthesis is the chemical change in plants that uses the sun's energy and converts it into glucose and oxygen.
Plants absorb the sun's energy for use during photosynthesis. During photosynthesis, plants take energy & water and convert it into glucose. Glucose is a sugar that the plant then uses as food.
they get all food by photosynthesising. water plants get their energy from the sun, this then turns into glucose. when to much glucose is produced, the plant stores it in its leaves as starch. hope it helped :)
The Sun - chlorophyll in plants leaves absorbs light energy from the sun, this energy is then used to make food:Carbon dioxide + water (+ light energy) ------> Glucose + Oxygen
The process in which the sun is used to make energy rich molecules is called Photosynthesis. This process uses carbon dioxide, water and energy collected from the sun, to produce glucose molecules and oxygen gas. This process happens in plants and is the plant's main source of energy.
Plants store energy from the sun in the form of glucose through the process of photosynthesis. This glucose is stored in plant cells as starch or used for growth, reproduction, and providing energy for cellular processes.