The only element out of those listed which is on the same row of the periodic table as phosphorus is magnesium.
No, nitrogen and phosphorous are in different periods. Nitrogen is in period 2, while phosphorous is in period 3. However, both elements are in the same group, group 15.
There are seven, not two, other elements in the same period as neon. They are lithium, beryllium, boron, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and fluorine.
No. Carbon and Nitrogen are different elements themselves. They don't contain any element within them.
The elements in the second period are lithium, beryllium, boron, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, and neon.
The only element out of those listed which is on the same row of the periodic table as phosphorus is magnesium.
No, nitrogen and phosphorous are in different periods. Nitrogen is in period 2, while phosphorous is in period 3. However, both elements are in the same group, group 15.
There are seven, not two, other elements in the same period as neon. They are lithium, beryllium, boron, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and fluorine.
No. Carbon and Nitrogen are different elements themselves. They don't contain any element within them.
all of the cycles (water, nitrogen, and carbon cycles) are the same because they are all cycles that have to do with the atmosphere.
The elements in the second period are lithium, beryllium, boron, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, and neon.
No. Carbon belongs to period 2 whereas Phosphorus belongs to period 3.
The covalent atomic radius of carbon is 70 pm; oxygen has 60 pm and lithium 140 pm.
Lithium, Beryllium, Boron, Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Fluorine, and Neon.
No elements have the same average mass, but some isotopes are the same mass as other elements, For example Carbon-13 (an isotope of carbon) has the same mass as nitrogen-13 (which is also an isotope of nitrogen).
The percentage of nitrogen remains the same as the amount of oxygen that was used was replaced by the water vapour and carbon dioxide
N2, the common divalent form of nitrogen, does have the same number of protons and electrons as carbon monoxide. If both nitrogen atoms are nitrogen-14, the carbon atom is carbon-12, and the oxygen atom is oxygen-16, diatomic nitrogen also has the same number of neutrons as CO. Contrary to the fact for atoms, however, molecules with the same numbers of protons, electrons, and neutrons do not always have the same chemical properties.