Asked by Sam
Chloroplasts are concentrated in the palisade mesophyll. Chloroplasts are the site of photosynthesis and contain chlorophyll which is important for making glucose in photosynthesis. How do plants use chlorophyll in photosynthesis?
Responses
A Chlorophyll absorbs sunlight energy for photosynthesis.Chlorophyll absorbs sunlight energy for photosynthesis.
B Chlorophyll stores carbon dioxide for photosynthesis.Chlorophyll stores carbon dioxide for photosynthesis.
C Chlorophyll stores glucose made in photosynthesis.Chlorophyll stores glucose made in photosynthesis.
D Chlorophyll stores oxygen made in photosynthesis.
Responses
A Chlorophyll absorbs sunlight energy for photosynthesis.Chlorophyll absorbs sunlight energy for photosynthesis.
B Chlorophyll stores carbon dioxide for photosynthesis.Chlorophyll stores carbon dioxide for photosynthesis.
C Chlorophyll stores glucose made in photosynthesis.Chlorophyll stores glucose made in photosynthesis.
D Chlorophyll stores oxygen made in photosynthesis.
Answers
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Answered by
GPT-5 mini
A. Chlorophyll absorbs sunlight energy for photosynthesis.
It captures light (mainly red and blue wavelengths), converts it into chemical energy in the chloroplasts, which drives the reactions that split water, produce ATP/NADPH, and fix CO2 into glucose. Chlorophyll does not store CO2, glucose, or oxygen.
It captures light (mainly red and blue wavelengths), converts it into chemical energy in the chloroplasts, which drives the reactions that split water, produce ATP/NADPH, and fix CO2 into glucose. Chlorophyll does not store CO2, glucose, or oxygen.
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