The nitrogen is not absorbed in your body via lungs. So the amount of nitrogen in inhaled and exhaled air has to be same. Nitrogen protects your body from the harmful effects of 100 % oxygen.
they both 78% N2
More nitrogen...
you breathe in more nitrogen then oxygen because there is 78% n in the air and 21% o in the air
That would be the element, "Nitrogen".
No. Earth's atmosphere is fairly homogeneous, being about 79% nitrogen at all levels.
You can find nitrogen just about anywhere. Nitrogen makes up more than 75% of the air we breathe, and is also a constituent of every living cell, whether plant or animal.
The air is made up, mostly, of oxygen and nitrogen.. Air is 78 % nitrogen, 21 % oxygen, about 1 % argon, and a whole raft of other gases present in even smaller amounts..
Thank You Judy Olmsted! I really appreciate the answer.
you breathe in more nitrogen then oxygen because there is 78% n in the air and 21% o in the air
Well, if you meant "What will happen if oxygen is MORE abundant than nitrogen?" then the answer to that question is that all those who breathe in air would breathe more proficiently than ever before Well, if you meant "What will happen if oxygen is MORE abundant than nitrogen?" then the answer to that question is that all those who breathe in air would breathe more proficiently than ever before
it is inert, our air contains nitrogen more than any other gas
Nitrogen is the most common gas in the earth's atmosphere making up 78% a little more than 3 quarters which oxygen makes up 21% of the earth's atmosphere. We can't drink liquid nitrogen but we can breath in nitrogen. Nitrogen isn't an air pollution nor a greenhouse gas. So the answer is "yes", we can breathe in nitrogen.
Gas because a solid is very tightly packed, liquid is a little bit less packed, and a gas is very free.
That would be the element, "Nitrogen".
Bismuth is more metallic than nitrogen; nitrogen is a gas, nonmetal and bismuth is a posttransition metal.
No. Earth's atmosphere is fairly homogeneous, being about 79% nitrogen at all levels.
There is no more or less nitrogen in Antarctica than there is on any other continent on earth.
You can find nitrogen just about anywhere. Nitrogen makes up more than 75% of the air we breathe, and is also a constituent of every living cell, whether plant or animal.
urea, ammonia, amino acids, and many more