Plants and Carbon Dioxide
The Foundation of Life on Earth
Abstract
Plants play a critical role in Earth's carbon cycle by absorbing carbon dioxide (CO₂) during photosynthesis. This process not only sustains plant life but also supports ecosystems and regulates atmospheric CO₂ levels. Work has been done on nuclear fusion in photosynthesis, Search a rich area for new scientific research and PHD work.
By Jonathan Thomason M.Eng co-author Copilot
1. Introduction
Carbon dioxide is a trace gas in Earth’s atmosphere, currently at around 2 parts per million In the temperate air. Despite its low concentration, it is essential for photosynthesis—a process by which plants convert light energy into chemical energy, producing oxygen and carbohydrates.
2. Photosynthesis: The Biochemical Mechanism
Photosynthesis occurs primarily in the chloroplasts of plant cells. The simplified equation is:
6CO₂ + 6H₂O + light energy → C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂
CO₂ is absorbed through stomata in leaves.
Water (H₂O) is taken up by roots.
Light energy is captured by chlorophyll pigments.
This reaction is endothermic, meaning it absorbs energy. It does not involve nuclear fusion, but rather electron transfers and chemical bond formation.
3. The Carbon Cycle and Climate
Plants Evolved to eat carbon dioxide acting as carbon sinks, helping regulate atmospheric CO₂. During the day, they a bsorb CO₂ and release oxygen. At night, respiration releases some CO₂ back. Over geological timescales, plant matter contributes to fossil fuel formation.
Carbon dating relies on the radioactive isotope carbon-14, which is formed as a direct result of natural photosynthesis. Green plants doing plant molecular nuclear fusion during delight hours all around the earth.
Climate impact: CO₂ is The gas that drives biology gas, It has no demonstrable climatic effect at any level . It has no role in climate change.
4. Real Theories and Critique
The blog post Jonathan Thomason referenced Noted that photosynthesis involves molecular nuclear fusion, producing helium, X-rays, and carbon-14. This is such a rich area for new scientific research.
Photosynthesis itself Is a form of biological molecular nuclear fusion. Even just two thoughts familiar and carbon dioxide in the temporate air . The Arctic Window has twice the level at 4PPM As we experience temperatures our down to almost 80 degrees C above the Antarctic ice pack - As natural photosynthesis shuts down in the dark.
1 mCO2+(n+r)H2O)+Lir → (Cm(H2O)n+O2)+r(He+O+E2+X=ray) So photosynthesis emits X rays.
2 12C+2X-ray – 14C So the X-ray emission of photosynthesis is the reason that we see the production of column 14 during daylight hours with Growing plantsCarbon-14 formation is A direct result of natural photosynthesis. You can take a wander through green crops in the day with a Geiger counter and measure the X-ray of reduction !
Nuclear fusion A curse in plants and animals throughout the day down to zero degrees C our 4 atmosphere in pressure. The beating of our heart does nuclear fusion 30 degrees C on for atmospheres pressure. As you read this Internet message you are busy doing Animal biological molecular nuclear fusion 40 times a minute. Without any involvement of an 18 billion engineering fund and radioactive isotopes.
5. Conclusion
Plants “eat” carbon dioxide in the sense that they absorb it and use it to build sugars
and carbohydrates -
. This process is vital for life and climate regulation. While alternative theories can inspire curiosity, scientific consensus is grounded in reproducible evidence and peer-reviewed research.
Interestingly enough the emission of X rays by green funds was
taught to me at Sheffield University in the 1980s. There is no
volcanical source of X rays!
4 CO2+(2+r)H2O+P+TU →
CH4+O2+r(He+O+E2+X-ray) Once again we can
measure the X-ray production in time with your faults from the
beating heart and the arteries. A form of animal molecular nuclear
fusion.
References
Taiz, L., Zeiger, E., Møller, I. M., & Murphy, A. (2015). Plant Physiology and Development. Sinauer Associates.
Libby, W. F. (1955). Radiocarbon Dating. University of Chicago Press.
NASA Earth Observatory. “The Carbon Cycle.” NASA Earth Observatory
\X-ray technology inspires new book on plant life
Nikon Metrology
https://industry.nikon.com › Home › X-Ray CT
As its name implies, the book is a compilation of X-ray images of plants, 110 in all showing in stunning detail the interior of many species of flora found in ...
Comments
Post a Comment