Well, it would sputter quite bad until it's frozen, but sure.
No, a water gun is not designed to handle or shoot liquid nitrogen. Liquid nitrogen is extremely cold and can cause serious injury if not handled properly. It is not safe to try to shoot liquid nitrogen from a water gun.
It depends on how much water, how hot it is, and how much liquid nitrogen there is. The water will initially cause the liquid nitrogen to boil; if there's enough water and it's hot enough, it may make the nitrogen boil explosively. However, if there's enough nitrogen, it will eventually freeze the water.
Liquid nitrogen looks like boiling water, since at the point of liquid nitrogen at room temperature, it is extremely hot.
Yes, liquid nitrogen can be used to cool water. When added to water, liquid nitrogen evaporates rapidly, absorbing heat from the water and lowering its temperature. It is commonly used in laboratories and industrial settings for this purpose.
Liquid nitrogen can cause water to freeze instantly when pumped into it. Liquid nitrogen has a very low temperature of -320°F (-196°C), causing the water to freeze rapidly upon contact.
When water is a liquid, nitrogen is in a gaseous state. Nitrogen has a boiling point of -196°C, much lower than the freezing point of water, so it will be gaseous at room temperature when water is in a liquid state.
Yes, liquid nitrogen has a temperature of around -320°F (-196°C), which is low enough to freeze water almost instantly upon contact. When liquid nitrogen comes into contact with water, the water rapidly freezes and forms ice.
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.
At normal atmospheric pressure, nitrogen is gaseous over the entire liquid range of water (and considerably below as well; the boiling point of nitrogen is about 77 K).
Liquid nitrogen is less viscous than water.
No. Firstly liquid nitrogen has a boiling point of 77K. That's -196degrees Celsius, which will freeze all water in contact with it. Not only will the roots not be able to take up water from the soil, water within the plant cells will also freeze, damaging the roots. Secondly, liquid nitrogen will vaporize rapidly when exposed to the environment, which is at room temperature. This means that when liquid nitrogen is poured into the soil, it is not different from the plant absorbing nitrogen in the form of gaseous nitrogen. Thirdly, nitrogen uptake is best facilitated in the aqueous form, ie. dissolved in water in the form of nitrate or ammonium ions. Liquid nitrogen/gaseous nitrogen do not dissolve very well in water.
No it can not, their boiling points are vastly different.-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------Well, yes but the change will be explosive.If you poured liquid nitrogen into boiling water, all the liquid nitrogen would become gas and spray the remaining liquid boiling water in all directions.If you poured boiling water into liquid nitrogen, all the liquid nitrogen would become gas and spray the remaining liquid boiling water in all directions.Please don't try this, you will be severely injured!!!!!!