1. | Cornelius van Neil | Oxygen evolved comes from water |
2. | T W Engelmann | First absorption spectrum of chlorophyll a |
3. | Joseph Priestley | Plants restore to the air whatever breathing animals remove |
4. | Jan Ingenhousz | Sunlight is essential for photosynthesis |
1. | To determine the action spectrum |
2. | To determine the absorption spectrum of chlorophyll. |
3. | To detect the sites of oxygen (O2) evolution. |
4. | To detect the oxidizing species in the photosynthetic reactants. |
I: | Only green plants can prepare their own food. |
II: | In green plants, all cells, tissues and organs photosynthesise. |
1. | Only I |
2. | Only II |
3. | Both I and II |
4. | Neither I nor II |
1. | It absorbs longer wavelength of light and e- from H2O |
2. | It absorbs shorter wavelength of light and e- from H2O |
3. | It absorbs longer wavelength of light and e- from NADP |
4. | It absorbs shorter wavelength of light and e- from NADP |
Statement I: | The action spectrum of photosynthesis overlaps completely with the absorption spectrum of chlorophyll a. |
Statement II: | Accessory pigments like chlorophyll b, xanthophylls, and carotenoids widen the range of light wavelengths that can be utilized for photosynthesis. |
1. | Statement I is correct; Statement II is correct |
2. | Statement I is correct; Statement II is incorrect |
3. | Statement I is incorrect; Statement II is correct |
4. | Statement I is incorrect; Statement II is incorrect |
I: | The primary function of the light-dependent reactions in photosynthesis is to produce carbohydrates. |
II: | In plants, algae and cyanobacteria, sugars are synthesized by a subsequent sequence of light-independent reactions called the Calvin cycle. |
Assertion (A): | Water molecules appear on both sides of the equation of photosynthesis. |
Reason (R): | The molecules that enter the reaction are not the same molecules that emerge from the reaction. |
1. | Both (A) and (R) are True and (R) correctly explains (A). |
2. | Both (A) and (R) are True but (R) does not correctly explain (A). |
3. | (A) is True but (R) is False. |
4. | Both (A) and (R) are False |