The elements of starch are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.
Starch is a carbohydrate made up of hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon.
and the sun is mainly hydrogen and helium, so the answer is one
you have to lokk T WHAT ITS MADE OF AND THEN THE CHART
Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen make up starch.
Three*: Hydrogen, Carbon, and Oxygen.
* However, these components probably came from a sun other than our own.
only one
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Leaves absorb the light from the sun as energy, and store that energy in starch. Having less sunlight results in less starch.
Together, hydrogen and helium make up most of the Sun. I guess that would be over 98%.
hydrogen and helium The sun consists of 71 % Hydrogen, 27 % Helium, 1 % Oxygen and the last percent is made of Carbon, Nitrogen, Silicon, Magnesium, Neon, Iron and Sulfur.
The elements within our own sun are as follows: Hydrogen 72.46 % Helium 25.85 % Oxygen 0.78 % Carbon 0.28 % Iron 0.16 % Sulfur 0.12 % Neon 0.12 % Nitrogen 0.09 % Silicon 0.07 % Magnesium 0.05 % The standard equation for starch is (C6H10O5)n, n being the number of those monomers is in the polymer. So, the ratio of elements in the Sun is approx. H: 100 to C: 1 to O: 1 The ratio of elements in starch is approx. H: 2 to C: 1 to O: 1. Significantly less elemental hydrogen exists in starch found on earth than on our own star.
because the sun has some elements & compounds that the earth needs to make elements
the sun
The sun fuses hydrogen to make helium. It will be several billion years before the sun fuses helium to make heavier elements.
Hydrogen and helium.
hydrogen and helium
helium
Most plants store energy in the form of starch. The process of photosynthesis allows plants to convert the sun's energy into glucose, which is then converted into starch. The plant can then break the starch back down whenever energy is needed.
there are 7 elements in exact: water fire sun moon animal nature human Im not sure about some of this...
Many elements only form through high temperatures and pressures... both of which are present int the Sun - but not in the Earth's atmosphere.