Yes all life has atoms. Everything non-living aswell. Everything has atoms which consist energy, even the desk your sitting at has atoms moving right now although you can not see or feel them
Atoms form all the materials, living or not.
No, atoms are the basic building blocks of all matter, including living organisms. Cells, tissues, and organs are all made up of atoms. Without atoms, life as we know it would not be possible.
Carbon atoms. Organic molecules, such as proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acids, all contain carbon atoms as their central structural element. This is why life on Earth is considered carbon-based.
All atoms in the beginning were hydrogen atoms.
The simple answer is both. However, you ask the question thinking that atoms and cells are two distinct units, which they are not. The atom is a basic unit of matter consisting of a dense, central nucleus surrounded by a cloud of negatively charged electrons. The cell is the structural and functional unit of all known living organisms. It is the smallest unit of an organism that is classified as living, and is often called the building brick of life. In other words, all cells are made up of atoms. Indeed, all matter on Earth is made of atoms, however all life of Earth are made of cells. Therefore to clarify, all living things including our bodies, would be made up of cells, which are in turn made up of atoms. However, some non-living things such as rocks or minerals would be made up of atoms, and contain no cells.
Atoms form all the materials, living or not.
carbon
Life is a physio-chemical process and atoms are the physio part of that. They are the elements that form the basis of all matter; living and non-living.
ATOMS are real life examples of atoms. They do exist.
No, atoms are the basic building blocks of all matter, including living organisms. Cells, tissues, and organs are all made up of atoms. Without atoms, life as we know it would not be possible.
Carbon atoms. Organic molecules, such as proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acids, all contain carbon atoms as their central structural element. This is why life on Earth is considered carbon-based.
No. Your body will decay and all of your atoms will be recycled back into the circle of life.
All atoms in the beginning were hydrogen atoms.
No. Atoms are the smallest units of matter, and cells are made up of atoms grouped in molecules (which are collections of atoms). Think about it like this: Atoms are the basic building blocks of all matter, but cells are the basic building blocks of life. Also cells have directives, and they also make up life. Atoms make up cells which make up life.
The secret of mass is a paper by Ron Alvarez that declares that the atom is fundamental life form defining life as energy and animation with the ability for atoms to organize into elements according to the seemingly inteligent preprogrammed chemical bonds that arrange atoms into elements. this would suggest that all matter is made from life and would lead to the realization that their is no such thing as an inanimate object because all matter is made of atoms which is animated by definition.
Not all isotopes have a half life: many are stable. The concept is applicable only for radioactive isotopes. Atoms of radioactive isotopes "decay" into other atoms. The probability that a particular atom decays in any given time period is constant and so the process is an exponential one which depends on the overall rate and the number of atoms which are available for decay. The half life for an isotope is the period after which half the atoms have decayed.
Radioisotopes are "radioactive isotopes"; they are not stable. Radioactive atoms will decay, or break apart into other atoms, by emitting an electron, or a neutron or a positron or an alpha particle (2 protons and two neutrons). The rate at which this happens is measured by the "half-life"; after one half-life, half of the atoms will have decayed. After another half-life, half of the remaining atoms will have decayed. Atoms with short half-lives are highly radioactive, and can be fairly dangerous. Atoms with long half-lives are only slightly radioactive, and aren't all that dangerous.