The correct answer is : Light energy is captured by plants; light energy is converted to chemical energy.
In the process of photosynthesis, special pigment molecule called chlorophyll can capture the energy of the light, more specifically the photon. When a particle of light (a photon) with a specific energy reaches this pigment in the leaves of plants, the energy is transferred from the particle to the molecule, and the molecule becomes excited. This is the phase where the energy of the light is captured and transformed into chemical energy that can later be used to make sugars.
All of the later chemical processes that transfer the energy from the excited chlorophyll to the sugar molecules are not dependent on the light and can happen during the night as well.
Secondary consumers receive less energy from the food chain than primary consumers.
Primary consumers are herbivores, meaning they eat the plants that have 100% energy.
Secondary consumers are either omnivores or carnivores. This means that they eat both animals and plants. In the situation that a secondary consumer is a carnivore, the secondary consumer is receiving less energy from the primary consumer.
Hope this helps!
Answer:
3.94 atm
Explanation:
Using the general gas law equation as follows;
PV = nRT
Where;
P = pressure (atm)
V = volume (L)
n = number of moles (mol)
R = gas law constant (0.0821 Latm/molK)
T = temperature (K)
According to the information provided in this question;
P = ?
V = 50 L
T = 300K
n = 8 mol
Using PV = nRT
P = nRT/V
P = (8 × 0.0821 × 300) ÷ 50
P = 197.04 ÷ 50
P = 3.94 atm
Answer:
Carbon starts as coal or oil in the earth, then is brought up by mining or drilling. When brought up, it is used up and the gases go into the atmosphere. Trees, soil and water act as carbon sinks, which suck up all the carbon from the air and contain it. When carbon is absorbed by the soil, it goes back into the ground.
Explanation:
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Botanist
Biologist/Biological Scientist: A scientist who studies living organisms and living systems. Botanist: A scientist who studies plants. Chemical Ecologist: A scientist who studies chemicals in the interactions of living organisms. Chief Scientist: A scientist who leads other scientists in a particular research area.