What would happen if there was no nitrogen in the atmosphere?

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I know the nitrogen in the atmosphere is relatively inert but what is its purpose and what would happen if it all vanished or was replaced with another gas like Oxygen or CO2?

In: Planetary Science

2 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

First it is a fundamentally improper approach to ask “what is its purpose”. The nitrogen in the atmosphere was not put there by a mind with intent therefore there can be no “purpose” to its existence. It is there simply because it is. That said one of the notable uses of atmospheric nitrogen is bacteria forming things like ammonia, nitrates, and nitrites in the nitrogen cycle. Without it most life wouldn’t exist.

If all nitrogen was simply removed then about 78% of the atmosphere would be gone. Atmospheric pressure is due to the weight of all the gasses being pulled by gravity, so the remaining mostly oxygen atmosphere would be extremely low pressure. This would result in the death of most life as it is adapted to higher pressures.

If it was replaced by CO2 then all the animals would die in moments as CO2 is very poisonous. If it was replaced with oxygen then all animals would die because that high pressure nearly pure oxygen environment is very corrosive. Although if most people would die from organ failure or incineration from a global pure oxygen environment is up for debate.

Basically the answer is the death of everything with minor variations on how.

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