An atom is not composed of cells, it is composed of particles.
An atom is not composed of cells, it is composed of particles.
An atom does not contain any cells. Atoms are the smallest units of matter and are composed of protons, neutrons, and electrons. Cells are the basic structural and functional units of living organisms.
Each face of a cubic unit cell is shared by two adjacent unit cells, so an atom on the face of a cubic unit cell is shared by two unit cells.
Flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) serves primarily as a hydrogen atom carrier molecule in cells.
An atom is smaller than a cell, and a molecule is smaller than both atoms and cells. Cells are composed of molecules, which in turn are made up of atoms.
"Energy cells" is non-standard terminology, and I don't know what you meant by it. A neutral silicon atom has 14 electrons in total, if that helps.
Valence electrons
Note that not all blood cells are red; there are also white blood cells. Red blood cells contain a chemical called hemoglobin, and hemoglobin includes an iron atom, and when the iron atom has an oxygen molecule loosely attached to it (by a coordinate covalent bond) it will have a red color (for a deeper explanation it is necessary to examine the structure of the electron orbitals in the iron atom).
An atom is several orders of magnitude smaller than a cell. Even the smallest of cells is composed of trillions of atoms.
cells are not parts of atoms!
Cells are the basic units of all living things.
Electrons don't have cells. Electrons are the smallest part of the atom, which in turn makes up every other living thing.