Asked by camila
uring a nutrition lab, students compared these items:
Protein bar: 18 g protein, 12 g carbohydrate, 6 g fat, plus calcium and vitamin C.
Bottle of water: 0 g protein, carbohydrate, or fat; contains dissolved minerals.
Diet soda: 0 g protein, carbohydrate, or fat; has artificial sweetener.
Potato chips: 3 g protein, 24 g carbohydrate, 9 g fat, trace sodium.
They also reviewed macromolecule diagrams and learned that all carbohydrates, fats, and proteins contain C, H, O atoms, while proteins also contain N atoms.
Some students argued that water and diet soda should count as food because we consume them. Others thought minerals should count as food because they’re needed for survival.
Scientists define food as any substance that provides energy and/or molecular building blocks.
Which of the following items count as food under this definition?
(Select ALL that apply.) 2 items
Responses
C. The bottle of water — it hydrates cells but supplies no usable energy or building blocks.
C. The bottle of water — it hydrates cells but supplies no usable energy or building blocks.
A. The protein bar — it contains carbohydrates, fats, and proteins that can be broken down for energy and matter.
A. The protein bar — it contains carbohydrates, fats, and proteins that can be broken down for energy and matter.
D. The diet soda — it contains artificial sweetener so it can provide some molecular building blocks.
D. The diet soda — it contains artificial sweetener so it can provide some molecular building blocks.
E. The potato chips — they have macronutrients (C, H, O-based) that provide energy and matter.
E. The potato chips — they have macronutrients (C, H, O-based) that provide energy and matter.
B. The calcium in the protein bar — it provides energy because it’s on the nutrition label.
B. The calcium in the protein bar — it provides energy because it’s on the nutrition label.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
A. The protein bar and E. The potato chips.
Reason: both contain macronutrients (carbohydrates, fats, and/or proteins) that provide chemical energy and carbon-containing molecular building blocks. Water and diet soda supply little or no usable energy or carbon skeletons, and calcium/minerals are essential nutrients but do not provide energy.
Reason: both contain macronutrients (carbohydrates, fats, and/or proteins) that provide chemical energy and carbon-containing molecular building blocks. Water and diet soda supply little or no usable energy or carbon skeletons, and calcium/minerals are essential nutrients but do not provide energy.
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