Forestry/Photosynthesis

Photosynthesis is a process in which a plant (includes trees) uses energy from sunlight to produce sugar and uses it to make adenosine triphosphate (ATP). Photosynthesis occurs in the chloroplasts, a feature in plant cells that is not found in animal cells.

The process of photosynthesis is done mostly in the leaves of a plant, and water from the roots travel to the leaves through passages called xylem. Water, carbon dioxide, and sunlight work together and produce sugar and oxygen.

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Electron Transport Chain / Light Reaction
The electron transport chain (etc) takes place in the thylakoid membrane. It begins with light hitting a photosystem, which is essentially a bundle of light-recepting molecules. At the core is chlorophyll, which, when hit by a photon of light, loses an electron. This electron is later replaced by splitting a molecule of water into 2 protons and an oxygen molecule. Using the energy from the excited electron, specialized channel proteins pump protons across the thylakoid membrane from the outside fluid, called the stroma, into the inside of the thylakoid, which resembles a hollow discus. A gradient is then formed, where there are too many protons in the thylakoid,, and they want to come out. They come out through a special protein channel, called ATP synthase. As they are entering the stroma, the protons release potential energy, which is harnessed by the synthase molecule to make ATP.

Meanwhile, the electron that started this whole cycle, after it loses energy, gets stuck to a molecule called NADP+, to form NADPH. This, and the ATP that is formed, head for the Calvin Cycle, and the Oxygen is excreted as waste.