Nitrogen has two stable isotopes: N-14 and N-15 and 14 radioactive isotopes.
Nitrogen has three stable isotopes. Namely they are nitrogen-14, nitrogen-15 and nitrogen-16.
No, they are isotopes with the same atomic mass. But they are isotopes of different elements and so are very different from on another. For example nitrogen-16 and nitrogen-14 are isotopes of the same element.
These isotopes have a different number of neutrons.
As they are isotopes, they've different number of neutrons.
Nitrogen isotopes do not have a charge.Ions have a charge.
Among nitrogen isotopes, only nitrogen-14 and nitrogen-15 are stable against radioactive decay.
Isotopes of Nitrogen gay but
Every nitrogen atom has 7 electrons. There are 7, 8 and 9 neutrons in nitrogen-14, nitrogen-15 and nitrogen-16 isotopes respectively.
chemestry
No! Nuclides with different element names are never isotopes of each other, because their nuclei contain different numbers of protons and therefore are not chemically alike.
The natural isotopes of nitrogen are stable; for the synthetic radioactive isotopes of nirogen see the link below.
That depends on the isotope, as Argon has three different stable isotopes and many different radioactive isotopes.