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It would form a nitrogen atom because Nitrogen is a nonmetal, and covalent bonds occur when a nonmetal bonds to another nonmetal.
Any carbon atom can form a covalent bond with nitrogen. In hydrogen cyanide, HCN, the carbon atom forms a triple covalent bond with the nitrogen atom. In amino acids, the carbon atom forms a single bond with a nitrogen atom.
A nitrogen atom contains three valence electrons so a nitrogen molecule N2 will form a triple covalent bond.
A molecule.
3
3
Calcium, alone among the elements listed, does not form a diatomic molecule with another atom of itself.
The nitrogen atom forms 3 covalent bonds.
a nitrogen atom in an amino group and a carbon atom in a carboxyl group
One atom of nitrogen has 7 protons, 7 neutrons, and 7 electrons.
Yes Nitrogen and Hydrogen covalently bond to form ammonia and all the derivatives such as amines.
They form a covalent bond.