No, snow does not contain nitrogen. Snow is made up of frozen water vapor and does not typically contain nitrogen.
Solid nitrogen is called "nitrogen ice" or "nitrogen snow".
The four molecules that contain the element nitrogen are ammonia (NH3), nitric oxide (NO), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), and nitrogen gas (N2).
No, monosaccharides are simple sugars that consist of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms. They do not contain nitrogen.
The chemical formula of chlorobenzene is C6H5Cl; chlorobenzene don't contain nitrogen.
Lipids contain oxygen and phosphorus, but not nitrogen. Nitrogen is typically found in proteins and nucleic acids, rather than lipids.
Nitrogen doesn't contain air, but the air contains Nitrogen.
Yes, soil does contain nitrogen.
Solid nitrogen is called "nitrogen ice" or "nitrogen snow".
Yes. All living things contain nitrogen.
Yes, fish fertilizer does contain nitrogen.
Proteins contain nitrogen, which is not present in carbohydrates.
Protiens contain nitrogen
No. Carbon and nitrogen are both elements. They contain only themselves.
There are many compounds that don't contain nitrogen: CO2, NaCl, H2O, C6H6, CuCl2...
Lipids haven't nitrogen.
Amines contain nitrogen.
That's going to depend on the density, i.e. the water content of the snow. Themore dense snow will have less nitrogen, since there's no nitrogen in water at all,only in the air, of which there's more in fluffy snow than in the heavier kind.