adding one more electron
Nitrogen hydroxide does not exist as a stable compound. Nitrogen can form various oxides like nitric oxide (NO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2), but no stable compound exists that can be identified as "nitrogen hydroxide."
Nitrogen has two natural isotopes: N-14 with 7 neutrons and N-15 with 8 neutrons.
They fill their tires with nitrogen.
Nitrogen is sufficiently stable.
Nitrogen has three stable isotopes. Namely they are nitrogen-14, nitrogen-15 and nitrogen-16.
Nitrogen-15 would have 8 neutrons, while nitrogen-9 (if it existed) would only have 2.
The most common stable isotopes of nitrogen are nitrogen-14 and nitrogen-15. Nitrogen-14 is the most abundant, making up about 99.6% of naturally occurring nitrogen, while nitrogen-15 makes up the remaining 0.4%.
Beryllium and nitrogen do not typically react with each other to form a stable compound.
nitrogen atoms join up to form nitrogen molecules becoz their outermost shell is not stable. to be stable, they join up to form nitrogen molecues... ;)
nitrogen-14 is stable, it does not decay.
The stable nitrogen doesn't emit any radiation.
The most stable isotopes of nitrogen are 14N and 15N.