Biology Chapter 5
summarize the process of photosynthesis
1. Water and carbon enter the chloroplast. 2. When the sun hits the leaf, the chlorophyll absorbs the energy. 3. Then a chemical reaction occurs where the water and carbon dioxide change into sugar and oxygen. 4. The light energy is stored in the sugar.
NADPH
An electron carrier involved in photosynthesis. Light drives electrons from chlorophyll to NADP+, forming NADPH, which provides the high-energy electrons for the reduction of carbon dioxide to sugar in the Calvin cycle.
Identify the reactants and products of photosynthesis
During photosynthesis, light energy converts carbon dioxide and water (the reactants) into glucose and oxygen (the products).
What is the molecule that leaves the Calvin cycle to be converted into glucose?
G3P
Describe how and where photosynthesis takes place within a plant
In plants, photosynthesis takes place in chloroplasts, which contain the chlorophyll. Chloroplasts are surrounded by a double membrane and contain a third inner membrane, called the thylakoid membrane, that forms long folds within the organelle.
Explain how plants absorb energy from sunlight
Most plants contain a special colored chemical or pigment called chlorophyll that is used in photosynthesis. Chlorophyll is what absorbs the sun's energy and turns it into chemical energy. Not all the light energy from the sun is absorbed. ... It's the green light reflecting that makes some leaves look green!
explain the relevance of photosynthesis to other living things
Photosynthesis is important to living organisms because it is the number one source of oxygen in the atmosphere. Without photosynthesis, the carbon cycle could not occur, oxygen-requiring life would not survive and plants would die. ... Without photosynthesis there would be little to no oxygen on the planet.
Explain how photosynthesis works in the energy cycle of all living organisms
Photosynthesis takes the energy of sunlight and combines water and carbon dioxide to produce sugar and oxygen as a waste product. The reactions of respiration take sugar and consume oxygen to break it down into carbon dioxide and water, releasing energy.
Which statement about thylakoids in eukaryotes is not correct? -Thylakoids are assembled into stacks. -Thylakoids exist as a maze of folded membranes. -The space surrounding thylakoids is called stroma. -Thylakoids contain chlorophyll.
Thylakoids exist as a maze of folded membranes
thylakoid
a disc-shaped membranous structure inside a chloroplast where the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis take place using chlorophyll embedded in the membranes
photosystem
a group of proteins, chlorophyll, and other pigments that are used in the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis to absorb light energy and convert it into chemical energy
pigment
a molecule that is capable of absorbing light energy
granum
a stack of thylakoids located inside a chloroplast
autotroph
an organism capable of producing its own food
heterotroph
an organism that consumes other organisms for food
NADP+
carrier molecule that transfers high-energy electrons from chlorophyll to other molecules
Which molecule absorbs the energy of a photon in photosynthesis?
chlorophyll
From where does a heterotroph directly obtain its energy?
eating other organisms
What is the energy of a photon first used to do in photosynthesis?
energize an electron
What two products result from photosynthesis?
glucose and oxygen
Which color(s) of light does chlorophyll a reflect?
green
Plants produce oxygen when they photosynthesize. Where does the oxygen come from?
splitting water molecules
Where in plant cells does the Calvin cycle take place?
stroma
Describe the main structures involved in photosynthesis
takes place primarily in plant leaves: Chloroplast, mesophyll, stomata, chlorophyll, pigment, thylakoid, granum, stroma
Which statement correctly describes carbon fixation?
the conversion of CO2 to an organic compound
light-dependent reaction
the first stage of photosynthesis where visible light is absorbed to form two energy-carrying molecules (ATP and NADPH)
stroma
the fluid-filled space surrounding the grana inside a chloroplast where the Calvin cycle reactions of photosynthesis take place
chlorophyll
the green pigment that captures the light energy that drives the reactions of photosynthesis
mesophyll
the middle layer of cells in a leaf
stoma
the opening that regulates gas exchange and water regulation between leaves and the environment; plural: stomata
chloroplast
the organelle where photosynthesis takes place
Define carbon fixation
the process of converting inorganic CO2 gas into organic compounds
electromagnetic spectrum
the range of all possible frequencies of radiation
Describe the Calvin cycle
the reactions of photosynthesis that use the energy stored by the light-dependent reactions to form glucose and other carbohydrate molecules
calvin cycle
the reactions of photosynthesis that use the energy stored by the light-dependent reactions to form glucose and other carbohydrate molecules