Science, asked by c00lch33z3y, 3 months ago

Respiration is the process of taking oxygen from the air and cycling it
through the lungs, which then gives oxygen to blood to be used in the body.
The carbon dioxide waste is expelled out of the lungs. Cellular respiration us-
es glucose, or sugars, from food molecules and turns them into carbon diox-
ide, water, and ATP a nucleotide essential to the body.
Cellular respiration can occur both aerobically (using oxygen), or an-
aerobically (without oxygen). During aerobic cellular respiration, glucose re-
acts with oxygen, forming ATP that can be used by the cell. Carbon dioxide
and water are created as byproducts
A. Illustrate the cellular respiration equation and label properly.​

Answers

Answered by hitanshipatel000
5

Answer:

With each breath you exchange the gases oxygen (O2) and carbon dioxide (CO2). Why is this exchange important? Why does your body need oxygen? What happens to the CO2? Where do we get O2? These are some of the questions that this section will help you answer.

Every cell in your body needs oxygen to function. You get the oxygen your cells need from the air you breathe. The air you breathe is made up of 20 percent oxygen. The rest of the air is mostly nitrogen (79%). Your body cells use the oxygen you breathe to get energy from the food you eat. This process is called cellular respiration. During cellular respiration the cell uses oxygen to break down sugar. Breaking down sugar produces the energy your body needs. This is very similar to wood burning in a fire. As the wood burns, it combines with oxygen and releases heat energy and carbon dioxide. When the cell uses oxygen to break down sugar, oxygen is used, carbon dioxide is produced, and energy is released. But instead of heat energy, much of the energy produced in cellular respiration is stored chemically for the cell to use later. Carbon dioxide is the waste product of cellular respiration that you breathe out each time you breathe. Blood picks up oxygen and releases carbon dioxide in the lungs. The opposite takes place in the cells where the blood releases oxygen and picks up carbon dioxide

Explanation:

Think about where the O2 you inhale comes from and where the CO2 you exhale goes. The exchange of gases doesn't only take place in the cells in your body. Actually, gas exchange is taking place all around you. In fact, oxygen and carbon dioxide are involved in the most important relationship that exists between plants and animals.

Figure 3.1 The blood in your lungs picks up oxygen and releases carbon dioxide. In your cells blood picks up carbon dioxide and releases oxygen.

Do you know where the oxygen your body needs comes from? Almost all the oxygen you breathe comes from green plants. They produce oxygen during a process called photosynthesis. During photosynthesis green plants manufacture the sugar molecules fructose and glucose. Green plants use energy from sunlight to build sugar molecules from carbon dioxide and water. Oxygen is produced when the plant combines the carbon dioxide and the water by using the Sun's energy. Plants use the sugar they produce to make plant structure and to provide the energy they need to live. Green plants use some of the oxygen they produce for their own life processes. But they release most of the oxygen produced during photosynthesis into the air as a waste product.

Unlike plants, which can get energy directly from sunlight, animals (including humans) must get energy from the food they eat. That food can be plants and/or other animals. Now think about the process of cellular respiration again. During cellular respiration animal cells combine oxygen with food molecules to release energy to live and function. Remember that cellular respiration produces carbon dioxide as a waste product. Animals use energy to grow, reproduce, and to function. They release the carbon dioxide into the air as a waste product. Plants help animals and animals help plants.Photosynthesis

The waste product of cellular respiration, carbon dioxide, is just what green plants need for photosynthesis. But green plants need more than just carbon dioxide to carry out the process of photosynthesis. They use a colored pigment called chlorophyll to collect energy from the Sun. During photosynthesis the plant uses the energy from the Sun to combine carbon dioxide and water to make the sugar called glucose. Like cellular respiration, the process of photosynthesis can be explained with words or in a chemical equation.

Light+Carbon Dioxide+water⟶Oxygen+GlucoseLight+6CO2 +6H2O⟶ 6O2+C6H12O6

Now let's read the chemical equation of photosynthesis. Here's what this chemical equation says. Green plant cells use the energy collected from sunlight to combine six carbon dioxide molecules (6CO2) and 6 water molecules (6H2O) to make one glucose molecule (C6H12O6) and 6 molecules of oxygen (6O2).

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