In wheat the effect of wavelength of light on the rate of photosynthesis
Answers
Answered by
4
Answer:
The rate of photosynthesis is affected by the different wavelengths of light a plant is exposed to because different pigments in chloroplasts absorb different wavelengths for use in photosynthesis
Explanation:
plz give me brainest
Answered by
0
The productivity of photosynthesis tops at around 450 nanometers and 650 nanometers.
Effect of wavelength on photosynthesis
- Apparent light falls somewhere in the range of 400 and 700 nanometers. A shade is a substance that mirrors a few frequencies of noticeable light while engrossing others; the shade of the colour relates to the frequency of light it reflects.
- Chlorophyll a, the essential colour of most plants, seems green since it mirrors light between frequencies of 500 and 600 nanometers, a reach that seems green to the natural eye. This really intends that there are limitations on the proficiency of photosynthesis to such an extent that photosynthesis is significantly less effective in the green scope of noticeable light.
- Light ingestion by chlorophyll and consequently, the productivity of photosynthesis, top at around 450 nanometers and 650 nanometers. These frequencies compare to light that seems violet-blue and red to the natural eye.
- Photosynthesis actually happens, though less productively, somewhere in the range of 500 and 600 nanometers. This is on the grounds that chlorophyll isn't the main plant shade; embellishment colours likewise give additional ingestion. Chlorophyll b is likewise green and retains roughly similar frequencies as chlorophyll a.
(#SPJ2)
Similar questions
Math,
5 months ago
India Languages,
5 months ago
English,
5 months ago
Physics,
10 months ago
Geography,
1 year ago