acid rain
No, Sulfur is an element (a substance comprised of only one type of atom) in itself, as is Nitrogen.
Sulfur is an element and therefore a substance out of the two.
nitrogen
Magnesium and sulfur are much more likely than nitrogen and oxygen to form an ionic bond, because the difference in electronegativity between sulfur and magnesium is much greater than the difference in electronegativity between nitrogen and oxygen. Another way of phrasing the reason is that magnesium is a metal and sulfur a nonmetal, while nitrogen and oxygen are both nonmetals.
Any is a renewable resource but we have sufficient nitrogen in the atmosphere.
No, Sulfur is an element (a substance comprised of only one type of atom) in itself, as is Nitrogen.
Protein
carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and varying amounts of sulfur
acid rain
Carbon combines with sulfur and nitrogen in order to form acid precipitation.
Those are the basic ingredients of gunpowder.
Oxides of Nitrogen, Oxides of Sulfur, Carbon Monoxide, PM10 (aka soot), and Carbon Dioxide (which won't technically kill you but may be causing climate change)
Carbon, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Potassium and Sulfur are the elements in the main ingredients.
This precipitation from the ambient atmosphere is often called "acid rain".
YES. Nitrogen and sulfur are non metals.
The compounds in the system nitrogen-sulfur are not ionic.
Sulfur is an element and therefore a substance out of the two.