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Chapter 8 Light and Pigments Need To Know • How photosystems convert light energy into chemical energy. (There will be more on this in the next couple of days.) Figure 8.5-1 H2O CO2 carbon fixation Light NADP ADP Pi Light Reactions Calvin Cycle ATP NADPH Chloroplast O2 Two Stages of Photosynthesis [CH2O] (sugar) Light travels in waves Visible light 380 450 500 Shorter wavelength Higher energy 550 600 650 700 750 nm Longer wavelength Lower energy Figure 8.7 Light Reflected light Chloroplast Absorbed light Transmitted light Absorption of light by chloroplast pigments An absorption spectrum is a graph plotting a pigment’s light absorption versus wavelength. Chlorophyll a Chlorophyll b Carotenoids 500 600 Wavelength of light (nm) (a) Absorption spectra 400 700 400 (b) Action spectrum Rate of photosynthesis (measured by O2 release) Figure 8.9b 500 600 700 Setup for Theodor W. Engelmann’s 1883 experiment. O2 is a waste product of the light reaction of photosynthesis Aerobic bacteria Filament of alga 500 400 600 Engelmann’s (c) Engelmann’s experiment experiment - 1883 - 1883 700 Absorption of light by chloroplast pigments Results Chlorophyll a Chlorophyll b Carotenoids 500 600 Wavelength of light (nm) 400 700 (a) Absorption spectra Rate of photosynthesis (measured by O2 release) Figure 8.9 400 (b) Action spectrum 500 600 700 Aerobic bacteria Filament of alga 500 400 (c) Engelmann’s experiment 600 700 Figure 8.10 CH3 CH3 in chlorophyll a CHO in chlorophyll b Porphyrin ring: light-absorbing “head” of molecule; note magnesium atom at center A slight structural difference between chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b causes them to absorb slightly different wavelengths. Hydrocarbon tail: interacts with hydrophobic regions of proteins inside thylakoid membranes of chloroplasts; H atoms not shown Figure 8.11 − Energy of electron e Excited state Heat Photon (fluorescence) Photon Photon Chlorophyll molecule Ground state (a) Excitation of isolated chlorophyll molecule (b) Fluorescence