The final temperature will depend not only on the initial and final pressures, but also on the initial temperature and whether the expansion is adiabatic.
It is stored within the sequence of nitrogen bases.
Commonly liquid nitrogen is stored below 100 psi. It can be stored at 0 psi. All liquid nitrogen tanks are insulated to stop heat from boiling off the liquid.
In the body, nitrogen is stored primarily in the form of amino acids, which are the building blocks of proteins. Proteins are essential for various physiological processes and nitrogen is a crucial component of amino acids. Additionally, nitrogen can also be stored in other molecules like nucleic acids, which are composed of nitrogen-containing bases such as adenine, guanine, cytosine, and thymine.
There is no single temperature. It depends on the nature of the specimen.
Plants, trees and any vegetation remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through photosynthesis. The carbon is stored in the plant and oxygen is released into the air.
The largest store of nitrogen is atmosphere, where it exists as nitrogen gas. Other major stores of nitrogen includes oceans and organic matter in soil.
found in water, soil/plants and the atmosphere
Nitrogen displaces oxygen that originally came from Earth's atmosphere. In the absence of oxygen, steel can not rust.
nitrogen fixing bacteria
In the atmosphere it is a gas, in the soil it its a solid, nitrogen gas can be converted to liquid in air separation plants. Also, as a liquid Nitrogen is very cold -- cryogenic temperatures. Nitrogen is stored as liquid commonly for convenience, even when gas is required, because liquid is more dense than gas and more nitrogen could be stored in the same volume. Simply, the answer to your question is nitrogen is a solid, liquid and gas depending on where you find it or how you've modified it.
In the atmosphere it is a gas, in the soil it its a solid, nitrogen gas can be converted to liquid in air separation plants. Also, as a liquid Nitrogen is very cold -- cryogenic temperatures. Nitrogen is stored as liquid commonly for convenience, even when gas is required, because liquid is more dense than gas and more nitrogen could be stored in the same volume. Simply, the answer to your question is nitrogen is a solid, liquid and gas depending on where you find it or how you've modified it.
Water is stored in the atmosphere in the form of water vapor.
Access aminp acids cannot be stored and is either broken down into nitrogen of converted to storable fats and carbohydrates by the liver. Nitrogen is highly toxic and is excreted in the urine, not stored in the liver.
It is stored within the sequence of nitrogen bases.
In the atmosphere stored as water vapor
It is commonly cooled down enough so that it turns into a liquid. Sometimes, it is also stored in special high pressured containers at room temperature.
Dr. Scholl's "Freeze Away" is a mixture of dimethyl ether and propane which is stored under pressure. It is highly flammable. When the liquid is released from pressure, it boils, removing heat and dropping the temperature of the remaining liquid to -42° C (-43°F). This mixture is typically the same as doctors use, but with different packaging. Liquid nitrogen is often used by doctors, but storage requires a large Dewar flask for storage. The dimethyl ether / propane mixture can be stored at room temperature and is much more convenient than liquid nitrogen. The liquid nitrogen boils away constantly requiring constant refilling. Liquid nitrogen boils at -196°C (-320°F) which is substantially colder.