nitrogen can be converted to liquid
but not to solid form
Nitrogen can be converted to a solid by decreasing its temperature below its melting point of 63K (-210°C). At this temperature, nitrogen transitions from a gas to a solid, forming a crystalline structure.
During nitrogen fixation, nitrogen gas is converted into ammonia or other forms of usable nitrogen by nitrogen-fixing bacteria. This process is important because plants and other organisms cannot use atmospheric nitrogen directly in this form.
You think probable to bacterial conversion.
Nitrogen primarily exists in a gaseous state at room temperature and pressure. However, under extreme conditions of low temperature and high pressure, it can form a solid called nitrogen ice, which has properties different from regular nitrogen gas.
At standard Tempoeratures and Pressures(STP) nitrogen state of matter is a GAS . However it can be cooled to form a liquid and further cooled to form a solid, but these are extremely low temperatures.
Nitrogen can be converted to a solid by decreasing its temperature below its melting point of 63K (-210°C). At this temperature, nitrogen transitions from a gas to a solid, forming a crystalline structure.
Nitrogen cannot form solid minerals on the Earth.
During nitrogen fixation, nitrogen gas is converted into ammonia or other forms of usable nitrogen by nitrogen-fixing bacteria. This process is important because plants and other organisms cannot use atmospheric nitrogen directly in this form.
Plants cannot use n as N2. So it has to be converted
Nitrogen fixation is the process by which nitrogen gas is converted into a form that plants can use, predominantly by nitrogen-fixing bacteria. Denitrification is the process by which nitrogen is released from soil back into the atmosphere in the form of nitrogen gas.
The process by which nitrogen gas is converted into a usable form for life is called nitrogen fixation. This process is carried out by certain types of bacteria and archaea, which convert nitrogen gas into ammonia or other nitrogen-containing compounds that can be used by plants and other organisms.
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.
You think probable to bacterial conversion.
The nitrogen cycle begins with nitrogen gas in the atmosphere being converted into a form that plants can use, through a process called nitrogen fixation. Key processes in the nitrogen cycle include nitrification, where ammonia is converted into nitrites and then nitrates, and denitrification, where nitrates are converted back into nitrogen gas. These processes help recycle nitrogen in the environment, making it available for plants and other organisms.
Nitrogen primarily exists in a gaseous state at room temperature and pressure. However, under extreme conditions of low temperature and high pressure, it can form a solid called nitrogen ice, which has properties different from regular nitrogen gas.
At standard Tempoeratures and Pressures(STP) nitrogen state of matter is a GAS . However it can be cooled to form a liquid and further cooled to form a solid, but these are extremely low temperatures.
Nitrogen (N) is monotonic but nitrogen gas (N2) is molecular.