Eukaryotes have a nucleus, Archaea do not.
Archaea have DNA that is not in a nucleus, while Eukaryotes have organelles in membranes.
eukaryotes have organelles in membranes (apex)
archaea are multicellular organisms
archaea have no membrane around their organelles
There are A LOT of differences but the main thing that distinguishes them is that organisms in Eukarya have a defined nucleus, which those in Archaea do not.
Bacteria, Archaea (prokaryotes), Eukarya (eukaryotes)
Assuming you are using the three-domain schema of Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya, the answer is that Domain Eukarya is not prokaryotic.
Bacteria archaea
Taxonomy is the branch of biology that's job is to name and classify species. On the broadest spectrum of classification of all living things, you have three overarching groups called Domains: Bacteria Domain, Archaea Domain, and Eukaraya Domain. Bacteria and Archaea Domains consist of prokaryotes, that is organisms with prokaryotic cells. Eukaraya Domain consists of eukaryotes, that is organisms with eukaryotic cells. Humans have eukaryotic cells and are therefore in the Eukarya Domain.
Eukaryotes have a nucleus, Archaea do not.
Eukaryotes have a nucleus, Archaea do not.
Both have a cell wall
Both have a cell wall
Both have a cell wall
Bacteria and Archaea and Eukarya
There are A LOT of differences but the main thing that distinguishes them is that organisms in Eukarya have a defined nucleus, which those in Archaea do not.
Both have a cell wall
Archaea and bacteria are both prokaryotic and have a cell wall. Eukarya is the largest and is thought to have evolved from prokaryotic. All three organisms are the building blocks of life.
Domain Eukarya, or eukaryotic organisms, are pretty much organisms with a nucleus(eukaryote comes from greek meaning "true kernel/nut", referring to the presence of the nucleus). This is opposed to the prokaryotic organisms and archaea, which do not have a nucleus.
Eukaryotes have a nucleus, Archaea do not.
Eukarya have cell nuclei while archae do not.