No, not at all. Iron is though, so if you are talking about Iron Sulphide then it's a little magnetic but only in small chunks
It has magnetic fields that contain iron sulphide.
Yes it contains a substance with a high magnetic field around it. Thus means its magnetic
nitrogen and sulphide
The formula for Lead Sulfide (or Lead Sulphide) is either: PbS for Lead(II) Sulphide, or PbS2 for Lead(IV) Sulphide.
well, iron sulphide is a compound so tin sulphide proberly is.
S^-22S
No. Hydrogen sulphide is covalent.
Yes, although only weakly. It will move a compass needle or attract a magnet. This property is useful for distinguishing pyrrhotite from other brassy colored sulphide minerals.
The formula for cesium sulphide is Cs2S.
no it is not because Electrons in orbit around an atomic nucleus usually come in pairs, having opposite spin and hence having magnetic poles pointing in opposite directions, resulting in no net magnetism for the atom. Elemental iron has unpaired electrons making it magnetic. When the iron combines with sulphur, electrons from the iron atoms pair with those of sulphur atoms.
Iron(II) sulphide: FeS. Iron sulphide is a synonym, but the first expression is more correct. Iron(III) sulphide: Fe2S3. Other forms of natural iron sulphides are known: see the link below.
The zinc sulphide (ZnS) is a chemical compound.