There is no element called 'notrogen.' I am not aware that it is even a word.
Nitrogen is sometimes released to the atmosphere as N2, NH3 and N2O. N2 is just gaseous nitrogen. NH3 is ammonia. N2O is nitrous oxide.
Nitrogen is also lost from soils as NO3-, which is nitrate. Nitrate is highly soluble in water, and it can leave the soil as water percolates through it.
By the process denitrification. Some bacteria do that also human
nitrogen
Organic compounds are made with carbon and some other atom. Often, this is hydrogen, oxygen, or nitrogen, but occasionally it can be some other element.
nitrogen, carbon, oxygen are what make up nitrogen dioxide.
Nitrogen is the most abundant element in the Earth's atmosphere. Bacteria in the soil 'fix' the nitrogen gas into compounds which can be taken in by plants; the plants get eaten by animals & they use the nitrogen to make proteins.
Nitrogen is a non metal element. Mass number of it is 14.
denitrifying bacteria For a fuller exposition see wikipedia for 'nitrogen cycle'.
By the process denitrification. Some bacteria do that also human
By the process denitrification. Some bacteria do that also human
denitrifying bacteria For a fuller exposition see wikipedia for 'nitrogen cycle'.
Nitrogen is needed by plants and they get it from the soil in compounds that contain the nitrogen.
Nitrogen is not a compound, it is an element. Nitrogen is found in many compounds, including all proteins.
nitrogen
Yes Nitrogen is a pure substance because pure substances are both compounds and elements. Nitrogen is an element.
Nitrogen exists in thousands of compounds as Proteins , Alkaloids , oxides in air , fertilizers etc. the simple compounds are NH3,HNO3, NCl3 etc.
N2 is a diatomic molecule of nitrogen. It is an element, not a compound. Elements are composed of only one kind of atom. Compounds are composed of two or more different elements that are chemically bonded.
Oxygen is simply an element. Nitrogen is another element. They can combine to make a variety of compounds, but no element is "based" on another.