| A | B | 
| the process of splitting glucose | glycolysis | 
| What carries H+ ions to the electron transport chain | NAD and FAD | 
| The 2-carbon molecule that starts the citric acid cycle | Acetyl CoA | 
| The cell's kind of energy | ATP | 
| Gross number of ATP produced during aerobic respiration | 38 | 
| Net number of ATP produced during aerobuc respiration | 36 | 
| How many ATP's that must be added to start gylcolysis | 2 | 
| The net total of ATP from glycolysis | 2 | 
| During heavy exercise your body uses this to produce ATP | lactate (lactic acid) fermentation | 
| the citric acid cycle and electron transport system occur in this organelle | mitochondria | 
| The final electron acceptor | oxygen (O2) | 
| the kind of respiration that requires oxygen (O2) | aerobic respiration | 
| the kind of respiration that occurs in the absence of oxygen (O2) | anaerobic respiration | 
| Where are the carbon molecules in glusose are eventually lost to | carbon dioxide (CO2) | 
| The splitting of glucose results in | pyruvate | 
| All cells require this | energy | 
| this is what ATP is broken down to | ADP + P | 
| In the electron transport system, the molecule that acts like a machine to produce ATP | ATP synthase | 
| Having more H+ ions on one side of the membrane produces this | H+ concentration gradient | 
| the overall formula for aerobic cellular respiration | 6 O2 + glucose ---> 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + 36 (net) ATP |