Plants use photosynthesis to turn sunlight into food, just like how you might use a solar-powered toy to charge your phone.
Imagine plants are like little chefs in the kitchen of nature. They have a special recipe that lets them cook up their own food using sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide (the same gas we breathe out). This process is called photosynthesis.
How it works
Think of sunlight as the spark that starts the fire in the kitchen. The plants use tiny green helpers called chlorophyll to catch this sunlight, like a net catching raindrops.
Inside the plant, water from the soil and carbon dioxide from the air are mixed together with sunlight. This creates glucose, which is like sugar, it gives the plant energy to grow and stay strong.
It’s like having a sunny day in your backyard, where you can make lemonade using just water, lemons, and some sunlight (if you had that kind of magic). The plants do this every day, turning light into life!
Examples
- Plants use sunlight to make their own energy, just like humans eat food.
- Photosynthesis happens in the leaves and helps plants grow.
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See also
- How does photosynthesis convert sunlight into energy for plants?
- How do plants convert sunlight into usable energy?
- How does photosynthesis actually work in plants?
- What is P700?
- What is chlorophyll?