Environmental Sciences, asked by aryankhanvilkar47, 1 day ago

During non-cyclic photophosphorylation,when electrons are lost from the reaction centre at PS-II, what is the source which replaces these electrons?​

Answers

Answered by TheUltimateDomb
2

Non-cyclic photophosphorylation is the normal process of photophosphorylation in which the electron expelled by the excited photo centre does not return to it. Non-cyclic photophosphorylation is carried out in collaboration of both photosystems I and II. An electron released during photolysis of H2O

Answered by xXNIHASRAJGONEXx
0

Answer:

The special pair's missing electron is replaced by an electron from PSII (arriving via the electron transport chain). ... In a process called non-cyclic photophosphorylation (the "standard" form of the light-dependent reactions), electrons are removed from water and passed through PSII and PSI before ending up in NADPH.

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