None, the question is how many atoms in a cell? There are infinitely many atoms in any given cell.
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.
An atom is not composed of cells, it is composed of particles.
Electrons don't have cells. Electrons are the smallest part of the atom, which in turn makes up every other living thing.
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.
A water molecule (H2O) consists of only three atoms: two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. Therefore, it does not have cells as cells are the basic structural and functional units of living organisms.
"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.
Nuclei is plural for nucleus. Most cells each have one nucleus, but some have many nuclei and certain cells, such as red blood cells, do not have a nucleus. The term for a cell with more than one nucleus is coenocytic. This can be because DNA replication has not been followed by cytokenesis, but there are some specialised cells that are multinucleated, such as some fungi and skeletal muscle in mammals. one nucleus but inside that nucleus is a nucleolus.
there are many different atoms some are called sex cells bloood cells white blood cells and many more cells...yeah this is a cell's answer not an atom answer muhahahahahha biach you got wasted!
Valence electrons