Yes
It gets as cold at -300 degrees Fahrenheit or colder
Anything at room temperature is regarded neither cold nor hot. <><><><><> If the question meant "Is nitrogen solid, liquid, or gaseous at room temperature?", then the answer is gaseous.
Nitrogen is not cold it is (as all other substances) the temperature you make it it is portrayed as cold because of liquid nitrogen that boils at -196 degrees it is used for a range of purposes from making ice cream to cryogenic medical purposes
Ammonia is a compound of the elements hydrogen and nitrogen.
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.
Nitrogen is a gas at room temperature and pressure, so it doesn't have a specific temperature. When liquid nitrogen is in contact with objects at room temperature, it can appear very cold because of its extremely low temperature of around -196 degrees Celsius.
Nitrogen is as hot or as cold as its surroundings. Molecular nitrogen, N2, won't withstand a temperature of several million kelvin; but atomic nitrogen certainly will.
Liquid nitrogen.
The direction of trave of the nitrogen released will depend on the temperature of both the air in the room and the nitrogen. Cold nitrogen in a hot room will sink, hot nitrogen in a cold room will rise. If both temperaures are about the same the bouyancy will essentially be neutral as air is about 79% nitrogen
make the temperature very cold and it will liquidify
It gets as cold at -300 degrees Fahrenheit or colder
It will get to about -130 degrees Celsius
Anything at room temperature is regarded neither cold nor hot. <><><><><> If the question meant "Is nitrogen solid, liquid, or gaseous at room temperature?", then the answer is gaseous.
Nitrogen is not cold it is (as all other substances) the temperature you make it it is portrayed as cold because of liquid nitrogen that boils at -196 degrees it is used for a range of purposes from making ice cream to cryogenic medical purposes
NO, nitrogen is normally a gas or liquid, depending on temperature. If it was cold enough, it would shatter like ice.
It would get cold. I don't expect the aluminium to react with the nitrogen.
Yes it can be sold in canisters, if you mean solid yes again but at incredibly low temperatures, think about how cold liquid nitrogen is