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Magnetic field effects on photosynthetic reactions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 March 2009

A. J. Hoff
Affiliation:
Department of Biophysics, Huygens Laboratory of the State University, Leiden, The Netherlands

Extract

When light impinges on photosynthetic material – a plant leaf, an alga or a photosynthetic bacterium – it is absorbed by an array of lightcollecting pigments. Through resonant energy transfer the absorbed quantum of light is transported to a trap, the reaction centre. Within such a trap, a specialized (bacterio)chlorophyll complex is able to eject from its excited state an electron. This electron is ‘captured’ by an adjacent acceptor, which in turn donates the electron to a second acceptor, and so on. Thus, light energy is converted into chemical energy which is ultimately used in the metabolic processes of the cell.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1981

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References

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