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8-2 An Overview of Photosynthesis

8-2 An Overview of Photosynthesis. An overview of photosynthesis. In the process of photosynthesis, plants use the energy of sunlight to convert water and carbon dioxide into high energy carbohydrates-sugars and starches-and oxygen, a waste product. Investigating Photosynthesis: Van Helmont.

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8-2 An Overview of Photosynthesis

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  1. 8-2 An Overview of Photosynthesis

  2. An overview of photosynthesis • In the process of photosynthesis, plants use the energy of sunlight to convert water and carbon dioxide into high energy carbohydrates-sugars and starches-and oxygen, a waste product.

  3. Investigating Photosynthesis: Van Helmont • In the 1600s, the Belgian Physician Jan Van Helmont devised an experiment to find out if plants grew by taking material out of the soil. • He determined the mass of a pot of dry soil and a small seedling. Then, he planted the seedling in the pot of soil. He watered it everyday for five years. By then, it had grown into a small tree and gained 75 kg.

  4. Investigating Photosynthesis: Jan van Helmont

  5. Investigating Photosynthesis • Since the mass of the soil stayed the same after five years, Van Helmont concluded that most of the gain in mass had come from water.

  6. Priestley’s Experiment • About 100 years after Van Helmont’s experiment, Englishman Joseph Priestley took a candle, placed a glass jar over it, and watched as the candle went out. • He reasoned that something in the air was probably needed to keep the candle from burning out. The substance was oxygen.

  7. Priestley’s Experiment • Priestley then found if he placed a live sprig of mint under the jar and allowed a few days to pass, the candle could be re-lighted and would remain lit for a while. The mint plant had produced the substance required for burning, In other words, it released oxygen.

  8. Priestley’s experiment

  9. Priestley’s experiment

  10. Jan Ingenhousz • Later, the Dutch scientist Jan Ingenhousz showed that the effect observed by Priestley occurred only when the plant was exposed to light.

  11. Jan Ingenhousz • The experiments performed by van Helmont, Priestley, and Ingenhousz led to work by other scientists who finally discovered that in the presence of light, plants transform carbon dioxide and water into carbohydrates, and they also release oxygen.

  12. The Photosynthesis Equation • Photosynthesis usually produces 6-carbon sugars (carbohydrates) as the final product, the overall equation for photosynthesis can be shown as follows:

  13. The Photosynthesis equation

  14. The photosynthesis equation • Photosynthesis uses the energy of sunlight to convert water and carbon dioxide into high energy sugars and oxygen. • Plants obtain carbon dioxide from the air or water in which they grow.

  15. Light and Pigments • In addition to water and carbon dioxide, photosynthesis requires light and chlorophyll, a molecule in chloroplasts. • Plants gather the sun’s energy with light-absorbing molecules called pigments. The plant’s principal pigment is chlorophyll. There are 2 main types of chlorophyll: chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b.

  16. Light and Pigments

  17. Light and Pigments

  18. Light and Pigments

  19. Light and Pigments

  20. Light and Pigments

  21. Light and Pigments • Chlorophyll absorbs light very well in the blue-violet and red regions of the visible spectrum. However, it does not absorb light in the green region of the spectrum. Green light is reflected by leaves, which is why plants look green. • Plants also contain red and orange pigments such as carotene that absorb light in other regions.

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