Well, I'm not sure I understand the sense of your question,but I guess you could say that air is a gaseous solution or a gaseous homogeneous mixture.
Air is a mixture of about 80% nitrogen, and about 20% oxygen, with small amounts of other substances (such as carbon dioxide and water vapor).
Most of Titan's atmosphere is nitrogen. There is only trace amounts of carbon dioxide.
No. Air is inherently a mix of countless substances, such as nitrogen, oxygen, carbon, and trace amounts of anything else you can think of.
There is more nitrogen in the air than carbon dioxide. Air contains:78.09% nitrogen20.95% oxygen0.93% argon0.03% carbon dioxideand trace amounts of other gases.
The planet Venus has nitrogen, carbon dioxide and smaller amounts of other gases. Most of the gas is carbon dioxide.
Nitrogenous wastes are waste substances which contain nitrogen. Generally these are produced in the liver by the breakdown of unwanted amino acids. Most of the waste (in mammals) is in the form of urea, but smaller amounts of other substances, such as creatinine, are also produced. Carbon dioxide only contains carbon and oxygen. Sugar and fatty acids only contain carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Some lipids (phospholipids) may contain small amounts of nitrogen.
oxygen, carbon dioxide, water and nitrogen. i hope this helps
Carbon dioxide, argon, nitrogen,krypton ,neon, xenon ,helium ,oxeygen
Outgassing.
argon
No. The atmosphere of Venus is mostly carbon dioxide with some nitrogen and trace amounts of other gasses.
Mars's atmosphere in composed primarily of carbon dioxide, with small amounts of nitrogen and argon, and trace amounts of oxygen, water vapor, carbon monoxide, and various other gasses.