Question
12. A difference between photosynthesis and chemosynthesis
(1 point)
Responses
Photosynthesis doesn't use light and chemosynthesis does.
Photosynthesis doesn't use light and chemosynthesis does.
Photosynthesis doesn't make sugar and chemosynthesis does.
Photosynthesis doesn't make sugar and chemosynthesis does.
Photosynthesis makes sugar and chemosynthesis doesn't.
Photosynthesis makes sugar and chemosynthesis doesn't.
Photosynthesis uses light and chemosynthesis doesn't.
(1 point)
Responses
Photosynthesis doesn't use light and chemosynthesis does.
Photosynthesis doesn't use light and chemosynthesis does.
Photosynthesis doesn't make sugar and chemosynthesis does.
Photosynthesis doesn't make sugar and chemosynthesis does.
Photosynthesis makes sugar and chemosynthesis doesn't.
Photosynthesis makes sugar and chemosynthesis doesn't.
Photosynthesis uses light and chemosynthesis doesn't.
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The correct response is:
**Photosynthesis uses light and chemosynthesis doesn't.**
Photosynthesis is the process by which organisms (like plants) convert light energy into chemical energy (sugar) using carbon dioxide and water. In contrast, chemosynthesis is the process by which some organisms (like certain bacteria) convert chemical energy from inorganic molecules into organic molecules, without the need for light.
**Photosynthesis uses light and chemosynthesis doesn't.**
Photosynthesis is the process by which organisms (like plants) convert light energy into chemical energy (sugar) using carbon dioxide and water. In contrast, chemosynthesis is the process by which some organisms (like certain bacteria) convert chemical energy from inorganic molecules into organic molecules, without the need for light.