THis is the energy required to remove(ionise) one (the first) outer most electron.
For nitrogen this would be quite a large figure, because nitrogen, wants to accept electrons ,rather than remove electrons.
As a general rule as you go along any given period, the ionisation energies increase. There are two 'humps', with a slight fall in ionisation energiers in this general increase.
The first ionization energy of an atom or molecule describes the amount of energy required to remove an electron from the atom or molecule in the gaseous state.
no such thing. maybe you meant hydrogen bomb.
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.
amont of energy that can be released - i guess heat
It is the lowest allowed energy state of an atom, molecule, or ion.
Law of mass conservation in chemistry: in a chemical reaction the mass of reactants is equal to the mass of products.Law of energy conservation: in a closed system the energy remain constant.
It is meant to transfer energy from one form to another.
no such thing. maybe you meant hydrogen bomb.
Energy that you can't get back.
energy used for work
electricity
electricity
It means which nitrogen base pairs with the other Nitrogen bases: A-t T-a C-g G-c
nitrogen is the best freezing agent, it i used in the labs to preserve things, that are meant to be defrosted later and still be viable after, ex":cell bank
Chemical energy
the sun
What is meant by 'covered'?
twyswf