Average Atomic mass of the human body?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers around estimating the average atomic mass of a fully grown male human, focusing on the primary elements that make up the human body: Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, and trace elements like Calcium and Phosphorus. Participants speculate that the average atomic mass could be around 10 to 12 amu, with some suggesting it may lean towards carbon's mass due to its prevalence. The surprising presence of nearly 1 kg of phosphorus in the human body is highlighted, with mentions of its role in key biomolecules like ATP and DNA. The importance of calcium phosphate in bones is also noted as a significant source of phosphorus. Overall, the conversation emphasizes the complexity of determining the average atomic mass due to the varied composition of human tissues.
Chaos' lil bro Order
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I was wondering average atomic mass is of a fully grown male human. What I mean by this is, if we consider the human body to be comprised of mainly Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen and other trace elements like Calcium, Sodium, Phosphorus, etc. Is it possible to determine an estimate about what the mass of the average atom is in our body? I'm guessing it would be about as heavy as carbon, but maybe less since hydrogen is very prevalent biologically.

My guess is the mass of the average atom in the human body is A = 10. Has anyone ever done a study of this, or is it too difficult to ascertain the proportions of atoms in our body? hmmm...
 
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Oooh. I'm carryin' around almost two pounds of phosphorus, am I? Surprising.

- Warren
 
Fantastic link, ty.

Given the values cited, I'd estimate an average atom is about A =12, or carbon.

Ya the nearly 1kg of Phosphorus is surprising to me too. Besides adenosine triphosphate, adenosine diphosphate and hyrogen phosphate, I can't think of any other bio molecules it would be found in. Anyone want to add to this list?
 
Chaos' lil bro Order said:
Ya the nearly 1kg of Phosphorus is surprising to me too. Besides adenosine triphosphate, adenosine diphosphate and hyrogen phosphate, I can't think of any other bio molecules it would be found in. Anyone want to add to this list?
Your bones are mostly calcium phosphate. That's where I'd guess the majority of the phosphorus comes from.
 
Interesting.
 
I couldn't resist adding it to my list of http://www.davesbrain.ca/bio_davesatoms.php" .
 
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DNA, RNA, NAD, NADP are all important and common cellular molecules that contain phosphorus.
 
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DaveC426913 said:
I couldn't resist adding it to my list of http://www.davesbrain.ca/bio_davesatoms.php" .

That is a very nice picture dave, you have a keen eye for displaying information in a clean and intuitive manner. When I have time I'll read more on your site.
 
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