All aroun us is a form of matter.
No. Elements are made of different forms of atoms, but all these elements are made out of three smaller things: proton, neutron and electron. However, we have discovered that these three are not necessarily the smallest unit of matter that exist. Physicist have found that those three things are in fact made of quarks. And these quarks are probably made of even small things. Science is still trying to find the basic unit of matter.
Matter, Atoms
Energy (such as light) and space (which may contain matter, but is not made out of it).
a desk
everything. anything.
Everything has matter. Matter is what things are made up off. Even air has it.
to be living it does. Everything is made up of matter, but living things are made up of cells
All THINGS are made up of atoms (of matter). (But "everything" - in human parlance - includes non-material things (like what you see).
matter is just a broad definition for different substances that make up life. This may sound confusing, so here's a better way to put it. Matter can exist in four states: solid, liquid, gas, and plasma. Water can be a liquid, gas, or solid so it is made up of matter, or lots of atoms of the same type. Also, oxygen is a gas so it is made up of matter, or atoms of oxygen. Does that mean they are the same things? No! Each element in the periodic table is made up of a different matter, thus living things and the universe are made out of many different mixed matters. However, there is no difference in science. Anything made up of many atoms of the same type is made out of matter.
Living things are made up of cells as their building blocks, while nonliving things are made up of atoms and molecules. These building blocks combine in various ways to form the structures and functions of both living and nonliving things.
Something made up of matter has physical substance and occupies space, such as solid, liquid, or gas. Something not made up of matter, like thoughts or emotions, is more abstract and does not have physical presence. Matter can be directly measured and observed, while non-material things are often subjective and cannot be physically touched or quantified.
Light, and the entire electro-magnetic spectrum, is made up of photons, which are not elements. Electricity is composed of energized electrons - again, not elements. Lastly, gravity, the strong, and the weak forces are not made of elements (if they are made of things at all).