C6H12O6 +6O2 → 6CO2 + 6H2O + Energy (ATP+Heat)
That's prety confusing.
I'll make it easier.
The outputs for respiration are:
Carbon Dioxide, Water, and Energy.
yes
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Aerobic - in the presence of oxygen Anaerobi
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In the Mitochondria
Cells produce more ATP under aerobic conditions because aerobic means that you need air and ATP needs air to operate so i made sence that cells would make more ATP under aerobic conditions.
Both Aerobic and Anaerobic cell respiration occurs in the Mitochondria.
Aerobic - in the presence of oxygen Anaerobi
First step of both aerobic and non aerobic respiration is Glycolisis.It take place in cytoplasm
During the second stage of the aerobic respiration 6 carbons enter and 6 carbons depart.
36
In the Electron Transport System
In the mitochondrial matrix.
Glycolysis, the first stage of aerobic respiration, occurs in a cell's cytoplasm. The second stage (acetyl-CoA formation and the Krebs cycle) and the third stage (electron transfer phosphorylation) occur inside a cell's mitochondria. They occur at the inner mitochondrial membrane, which is highly folded. Therefore, most of the reactions of aerobic cellular respiration occur inside the mitochondria of a cell.
Electron transport chain makes 32 or 34 ATP's.
Six carbons enter the second stage of aerobic respiration how many depart during the preparation steps and the cycle proper?
Glycolosis is the stage of respiration that all organisms perform.
Aerobic cellular respiration requires oxygen. Therefore which ever process that requires Oxygen to make it occur is NOT a stage of aerobic cellular respiration.
The second stage of aerobic respiration is the link reaction. This transition reaction forms acetyl coenzyme A. Glycolysis, the Krebs (or citric acid) cycle, and electron transport chain and chemiosmosis also happen at this stage.