Nitrogen is an atomic element and does not have any 'neurons' because neurons are nerve cells.
I think you meant 'neutrons' :-
Nitrogen has an Atomic Mass of 14.00674 and an atomic number of 7. As the majority of mass in an atom is in the nucleus and as the atomic number represents the number of protons in the nucleus, the number of neutrons ROUGHLY = the atomic mass minus the atomic number. In other words Nitrogen would have 7 neutrons in its nucleus.
The fractional part of the atomic mass is because there are isotopes of nitrogen some with more or less neutrons than 7. In fact there are two stable isotopes of nitrogen: 14N and 15N the most common is 14N (99.634%).
2 neurons
The isotope N-14 has 7 neutrons and the isotope N-15 has 8 neutrons.
A minimum of 3 neurons.
1
50.36
the group number for nitrogen is group 15.
The atomic number of Nitrogen is 7.
Usually, but mutations could affect the number of neurons.
The mass number of Nitrogen is 14 :-) .............so boring :-( eww :-\
It does not, the mass number of nitrogen is 14 not 15.
The ERG guide number for nitrogen is 121.
No. Neurons come and go throughout your life. The average (adult) human brain gains about 9000 neurons a day.