The iron atoms absorb enough energy to lose three electrons each and become iron(III) ions. The octa-atomic sulphur molecules absorb enough energy to become sulphur atoms. These atoms each gain two electrons to become sulphide ions with a -2 charge each. Since electrons are conserved, 1½ times as many sulphur atoms so react as do iron atoms. These ions now form a solid and give up energy. The overall process gives up energy (enough so that some of the solid goes off as a smoke).
Depending on how far you are in chemistry, you could get by with this explanation, or you could discuss whether the iron(III) sulphide formed is a simple ionic solid as described or something a bit more complicated.
it all happens with the mulecules and the atom. as they mix/combine and they then jion
In sulphur and iron the particles are pact tightly together so that they can not move
Iron and sulphur create ferrous sulfate?
what he said
Particles move at a faster rate at higher temperatures, than they do at lower temperatures. This is do to the fact that heat is a form of energy. When a particle has more energy is moves faster.
is it true the space between gas particles becomes very large
Thomson did the experiment various times to observe if the particles behave the same way. How they did he determined they were the same kind later called electrons.
their internal structure makes them behave in a similar way.
The ability to cause others to behave as they might not otherwise choose to do is manipulation.
how do particles behave in a solid state
Particles are small, hard spheres of insignificant volume. Attractive and repulsive forces between particles are weak.
The particles are moving rapidly
The air particles are behave like collidel particles because they collide with each other and form a high weight of air.
when freezing, particles moves slow with out stopping.
antimony is amphoteric, so in water it will behave as an acid and a base
Electrons behave like waves and particles this is characterised by the wave side in the Bohr model and can be diffracted yet it will collide with other particles.
Kinetic Theory.
Group I cations are typically spectator ions in a reaction
quantam mechanics
blah blah blah
They do not react to charged particles.