No. The wind is composed of a small amount of water vapor and about 20% oxygen and about 80% nitrogen. The water vapor may freeze but the oxygen and the nitrogen cannot freeze at the temperature of liquid nitrogen. Oxygen has a much lower freezing point than liquid nitrogen and if the nitrogen were to be frozen, liquid nitrogen is not cold enough to freeze it...sort of like trying to make ice using cold water.
In the atmosphere it is a gas, in the soil it its a solid, nitrogen gas can be converted to liquid in air separation plants. Also, as a liquid Nitrogen is very cold -- cryogenic temperatures. Nitrogen is stored as liquid commonly for convenience, even when gas is required, because liquid is more dense than gas and more nitrogen could be stored in the same volume. Simply, the answer to your question is nitrogen is a solid, liquid and gas depending on where you find it or how you've modified it.
You freeze water simply by cooling it to below 0 degrees Celsius. No special substance is required. If you are referring to the so-called "hot ice" the substance you use is sodium acetate. What you see happening in this case is not the water freezing, but rather the sodium acetate crystallizing from a supersaturated solution.
The cost of liquid nitrozen is 400
because liquid id liquid
Cryosurgery is a form of cancer treatment where liquid nitrogen is used to freeze abnormal cells. This is used as an alternative to surgery for cancers such as: kidney, liver, cervix and skin.?æ
liquid nitrogen will not freeze everything. Hydrogen and helium will remain a gas when exposed to liquid nitrogen.
The temperature of the liquid nitrogen is so low that it freezes water molecules from the air which forms as ice at the opening.
only in imaginationland
Of course, it is possible !
As a general rule, liquids don't freeze things. But the gas, Liquid Nitrogen, can freeze things.
If you dip them into liquid nitrogen (LIN) they will freeze instantly.
Liquid nitrogen
Under normal circumstances, liquid nitrogen is at a temperature of less than -196C - pretty cold!!!
Yes, liquid nitrogen exists. It is sold in strong, insulated containers and is used to instantly freeze biological specimens or tissue.
No. Liquid nitrogen is nothing like radioactive waste or a biological virus. It would freeze your hands off on contact.
If it contained any liquid, it would freeze. If it did not contain any liquid, it would get VERY cold.
Yes, if you somehow manage to breathe liquid nitrogen or some other refrigerant.