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Sunlight plays a much larger role in our lives than we expect.

All the food we eat and all the fossil fuels we use are products of photosynthesis. Photosynthesis is the process that converts energy in sunlight to chemical forms of energy that can be used by biological systems. There are 3 stages of photosynthesis. The first stage captures light energy; the second uses light energy to make ATP and NADPH, and the stage is to build carbohydrates. Light consists of tiny packets of energy called photons. When light shines on you, your body has a stream of protons hitting the surface. Molecules that absorb light are called pigments. The major light absorbing pigment in plants is chlorophyll. In green plants, chlorophyll is found in chloroplasts within plant cells. When atoms in a pigment absorb light, electrons are boosted to higher energy levels. The energy in the photons is transferred to the electrons, causing a move. A certain kind of pigment can absorb only photons with the appropriate amount of energy. Chemical reactions that involve the transfer of electrons from one atom or molecule to another are called Oxidation-Reduction reactions. Carbohydrates produced by plants during photosynthesis contain many energy rich electrons, and are highly reduced. Light hits the surface of a leaf. The light energy causes chemical reactions to occur inside chloroplasts in the leaf's cell. Photosynthesis in plants occurs within the chloroplasts. The pigment chlorophyll that absorbs photons is found in structures called thylakoids. Inside the chloroplast, photosynthesis begins when light strikes a chlorophyll molecule in the membranes a thylakoids. The light excites an electron that is joined to a proton donated by water. The energy carried by the electron powers a proton pump that transports a proton across the membrane into the thylakoids. When light strikes a second kind of chlorophyll, the excited electron does not use its energy to drive a proton pump. Instead, it is combined with a proton and joined to NADP, forming NADPH. Protons inside the thylakoids are driven by diffusion through a protein channel. The force of their exit adds phosphate to ADT, forming ADP.

Photosynthesis is the manufacture of carbohydrates in plants. The four main materials needed are sunlight, chlorophyll, carbon dioxide and water. The chlorophyll found in the chloroplasts absorbs sunlight. Chloroplasts are oval bodies, which contain the green pigment chlorophyll. The chlorophyll absorbs light energy and then converts it into chemical energy for photosynthesis. The food produced is then stored as starch in the form of starch granules. The greatest number of chloroplasts is found in the palisade layer as it receives more sunlight. Carbon dioxide and oxygen are exchanged with the atmosphere by diffusion through the stomata. The stomata also allow the diffusion of water vapor out of the leaf. Stomata are tiny pores found in the upper epidermis and the lower epidermis of the leaf but the lower epidermis has the greatest number stomata.

Because of the large air spaces between the spongy mesophyll cells, carbon dioxide diffuses rapidly through the stomata to the palisade cells. The spongy mesophyll cells are loosely packed to form these large air spaces and they contain fewer chloroplasts. The water needed is absorbed from the soil by the roots. The water is then transported to the leaves by the xylem. The veins of the leaf consist of xylem and phloem. The xylem vessels are made of large hollow dead cells. They transport water and mineral salts throughout the plant. The phloem takes away the manufactured food from the leaves to the other parts of the plants.

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