Find the atomic number of nitrogen in a Periodic Table or other reference. (It is 7 for nitrogen.) The number of electrons in any neutral atoms is always the same as the atomic number of the atom.
Nitrogen
The answer is carbon
The number of Electrons is always the same as the number of Protons.The number of Protons is the "Atomic Number" in the Periodic Table.The element with Atomic Number 7 is Nitrogen (N).Nitrogen is at the top of Group 15 in the Periodic Table.See related link below.
The answer is: 2p orbitals
Nitrogen
There are 8 valence electrons in nitrogen ion, hence 8 dots.
7 protons and 7 electrons, as the atomic number of nitrogen is 7.
Nitrogen's symbol is N. Its electron configuration is 2s, 3p.
Nitrogen's atomic number is 7. Therefore, it has 7 protons, all of which are positively charged. In order to be neutral then, nitrogen must also have 7 electrons in it.
a radical is a free electron, therefore it cannot be nitrogen or oxygen, its just an electron
Nitrogen (N) has atomic number 7. It has full 1s and 2s orbitals. The 2px orbital has 1 electron, the 2py orbital has 1 electron and the 2pz orbital has 1 electron. So the valence shell is: 2s2 - 2p3. It contains 5 electrons.
The ground state electron configuration for nitrogen is [He]2s2.2p3.
It is 1s22s22p3
Nitrogen's atomic number is 7. Thus, it has 7 protons and 7 electrons. 14N has 14 - 7 = 7 neutrons.
There are 5 valence electrons in Nitrogen. it is present in group-15.
The answer is nitrogen. Nitrogen is one example of an element that has the same valence electron configuration as phosphorus.Ê
Nitrogen