DNA
No its a DNA
pairs of nitrogen bases
There are 2 non bonding pairs in a nitrogen molecule
Yes, nitrogen can form single bonds with other atoms by sharing one pair of electrons, as in N2 molecule. It can also form double bonds by sharing two pairs of electrons, as in nitrogen dioxide (NO2) molecule.
A with T and G with C .
There are three bonds between Nitrogen and hydrogen and there are thus 3 shared bonding pairs of electrons. in addition since Nitrogen is 1s22s22p3 there are also the none bonding 1s2 electrons and the 2s2 electrons making 5 total shared pairs of electrons.
A nitrogen molecule contains two nitrogen atoms which are bonded to each other through a covalent triple bond.
A pairs with T ,G pairs with C , T pairs with A, G pairs with C during replication .
A pairs with T ,G pairs with C , T pairs with A, G pairs with C during replication .
In DNA, the nitrogen base adenine (A) pairs with the nitrogen base thymine (T), and the nitrogen base cytosine (C) pairs with the nitrogen base guanine (G). So the base pairs are A:T and C:G. One way to remember is that A:T spells the word "at."
The two chains are connected by hydrogen bonding between nitrogen bases to form a long double-stranded molecule.So hydrogen bonding determines which nitrogen bases form pairs of DNA.
hydrogen bonds