Not sure what you mean by "edible," but, if you mean, "Would there be any harm if someone swallowed a sub-atomic particle?", then be aware that every piece of food you have ever eaten is composed of sub-atomic particles.
Yes, atoms contain subatomic particles.
Molecules contain atoms and these atoms contain subatomic particles.
Isotopes are atoms, not subatomic particles.
yes, that's why they are called subatomic.
The subatomic particles are: neutron, proton and electron.
Atoms, molecules, and cells are not subatomic particles. Atoms are made up of subatomic particles (protons, neutrons, electrons), molecules are made up of atoms, and cells are the basic unit of life in living organisms.
Subatomic particles are smaller than molecules and are the building blocks of atoms. Protons, neutrons, and electrons are examples of subatomic particles found in atoms. There are no known subatomic particles that are bigger than molecules.
protons, neutrons, and electrons are the subatomic particles involved with an atom
atoms are made of subatomic particles.
Yes.
The electron.
No, Dalton believed that atoms were indivisible.