Answer:
The overies release progesterone and estrogen
Theres three major estrogens estradiol, estrone, and estriol, those work together to help develop female characteristics during puberty to ensure fertily.
Answer:
C6H12O6 - glucose.
Synthesis.
Explanation:
Equation showing Photosynthesis
6CO2(g) + 6H2O(l) --> C6H12O6(s) + 6O2(g)
Photosynthesis requires sunlight as a source of energy for plants, carbon dioxide, and water as starting reactants. After the process is complete, photosynthesis releases oxygen and produces carbohydrate (organic) molecules, most commonly glucose.
The equation also shows that during photosynthesis, CO₂ gains hydrogen atoms and becomes a sugar/glucose molecule. The synthesis of any molecule requires energy and during photosynthesis this energy is provided by the sun.
Just a guess, does it have something to do with appearance, aren't they all colorless, or have the cloudy opaque sheen?
There are two types of nucleic acids in biology: DNA and RNA. DNA carries the heritable genetic information of the cell and is composed of two antiparallel strands of nucleotides arranged in a helical structure. Each nucleotide subunit is composed of a pentose sugar (deoxyribose), a nitrogenous base, and a phosphate group. The two strands associate via hydrogen bonds between chemically complementary nitrogenous bases. Interactions known as "base stacking" interactions also help stabilize the double helix. By contrast to DNA, RNA can be either be single stranded, or double stranded. It too is composed of a pentose sugar (ribose), a nitrogenous base, and a phosphate group. RNA is a molecule of may tricks. It is involved in protein synthesis as a messenger, regulator, and catalyst of the process. RNA is also involved in various other cellular regulatory processes and helps to catalyze some key reactions (more on this later). With respect to RNA, in this course we are primarily interested in (a) knowing the basic molecular structure of RNA and what distinguishes it from DNA, (b) understanding the basic chemistry of RNA synthesis that occurs during a process called transcription, (c) appreciating the various roles that RNA can have in the cell, and (d) learning the major types of RNA that you will encounter most frequently (i.e. mRNA, rRNA, tRNA, miRNA etc.) and associating them with the processes they are involved with. In this module we focus primarily on the chemical structures of DNA and RNA and how they can be distinguished from one another.