In its natural state, nitrogen is diatomic and will form N2 (two bonded nitrogen atoms).
in its pure natural state uncombined with other elements, bromine is a LIQUID...
Topaz usually shows up as being a yellow color in it's pure state. Blue topaz appears as blue in it's natural state.
chromium can be pure or it can be in its natural state
#$Cost of nCost of nitrogen?Cost of nitrogen?Cost of nitrogen?Cost of nitrogen?Cost of nitrogen?Cost of nitrogen?Cost of nitrogen?Cost of nitrogen?Cost of nitrogen?Cost of nitrogen?Cost of nitrogen?Cost of nitrogen?Cost of nitrogen?
In its natural state, nitrogen is diatomic and will form N2 (two bonded nitrogen atoms).
if sodium is in a compound, it will not be in natural state. natural state implies that it is a pure element. ie not a compound
in its pure natural state uncombined with other elements, bromine is a LIQUID...
Nitrogen is a gas. :D
Yes Nitrogen is a pure substance because pure substances are both compounds and elements. Nitrogen is an element.
Pure sulfur has a beautiful yellow color.
nitrogen gas is BASICALLY JUST PLAIN NITROGEN AND THUS IT IS A PURE SUBSTANCE.
Topaz usually shows up as being a yellow color in it's pure state. Blue topaz appears as blue in it's natural state.
Topaz usually shows up as being a yellow color in it's pure state. Blue topaz appears as blue in it's natural state.
It is an element. Since any temperature is "natural", the physical state is meaningless. It can be anything from a Bose-Einstein condensate (unlocalizeable), a solid, a liquid, a gas, or a plasma... and be "natural" for that temperature. At standard temperure and pressure, it is a very stable diatomic gas (N2). Nitrogen's natural stage is N2 gas. It is diatomic and can only exist with 2 nitrogen molecules, so it must be N2 not N.
Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine, and Iodine are all diatomic in their natural states.
Nitrogen (N) is a chemical element, not a solution; nitrogen can be obtained as a very pure gas.