Yes, the Earth does get heavier as a result of photosynthesis
aychamo said:
RAD4921 said:
I was wondering if during the process of photosynthesis if energy from the sun is actually converted into matter, such as sugers and plant material.
No. The light energy is not being converted into matter.
Your answer violates one or more laws of conservation of mass-energy. The correct answer is, "Yes. The process of photosynthesis converts energy from the sun into matter. The matter is incorporated into chemical-energy-storage items such as sugars and plant material, though not discretely. The added material is in the form of additional mass."
Photons have mass. Eight pounds of photons drop on the Earth every second. This photonic mass does not magically disappear. Some of it radiates away, but whatever is stored as potential chemical (petrochemicals) or potential kinetic (water in a hydropower reservoir) adds mass to the earth.
The light is used in the process of photosynthesis to break bonds
Yes. And energy is stored as potential energy when these bonds are broken. Creation of potential energy always results in proportional creation of matter. Lift a pencil from a floor to a desk and mass has been added to the pencil. Knock that pencil off the desk and the same amount of mass converts into energy. Shine sunlight on plant material so that it grows and eventually decays into butane and mass – exactly proportional to the addional potential chemical energy – has been added to the material. Flick a lighter filled with that butane and the chemically stored mass-energy is released, making the Earth then a little lighter and a little hotter since mass was converted into energy.
The energy in coal is put there ultimately from sunlight. Is the Earth's coal carrying the weight of ancient photons? Yes. The photonic mass never went anywhere. Any photons that have been captured by the Earth and turned into potential chemical energy have contributed to the mass of the earth. How
much mass? For every year that a typically-sized gigawatt-electrical coal power plant runs, almost one kilogram of matter is turned into energy.
In converting back into energy, the mass has literally vanished from the universe. But it isn't magic. It is simply an aspect of the laws of conservation of mass-energy.
Normally we associate conversion of mass into energy with nuclear processes. For example, running a typically-sized gigawatt-electrical nuclear power plant for a year also converts about a kilogram of mass into energy (the nuke plant converts a little more per equivalent amounts of
electricity produced since nuke plants are not as thermally efficient as coal plants and the amount of mass converted into energy depends directly upon how much
thermal energy is produced). However, storage of energy in the form of mass, and re-conversion of that mass back into energy, generalized broadly – to pencils, to butane, to coal, and to nukes.
To reiterate for the original poster: Yes, the Earth does get heavier as a result of photosynthesis.