How does photosynthesis convert sunlight into chemical energy?

Photosynthesis is how plants turn sunlight into food using water and carbon dioxide, like a kitchen that runs on sunbeams.

Imagine you're baking cookies in a sunny kitchen. The sunlight is the heat from your oven, the water is the liquid you add to the dough, and the carbon dioxide is like the air you breathe while mixing. Inside the plant’s green leaves, which act like tiny chefs, these ingredients are mixed together.

How the Sun's Energy Gets Used

The chlorophyll in the leaves (the green stuff) catches the sunlight, just like a net catching raindrops. This energy helps the plant turn water and carbon dioxide into sugar, which is its food, and oxygen, which we breathe out.

It’s like having a solar-powered blender: it takes simple ingredients and makes something delicious, and even gives us air to help us live!

The sugar made from photosynthesis can be used right away or stored for later, like how you save some cookies in the jar for tomorrow.

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Categories: Biology