Volcanoes
Sulfur is not a highly reactive element under ordinary condition.
sulpher dioxide. eh Corrected: yes... it's sulfur.. and when you burn sulfur you'll get sulfur dioxide after combuston.
No. It is an igneous rock, more specific a volcanic rock. It is essentially sulfur and often found around the craters or necks of volcanos.
Sulfur was named by using the Latin word for the element, sulphurium. It is spelled 'sulphur' in most English-speaking countries other than the US.Added:sulfur (Sanskrit, गन्धक sulvari; LatinSulphurium)
Gallium is often found as a trace element in diaspore, sphalerite, germanite, bauxite, and coal.
Sulfur is not a highly reactive element under ordinary condition.
Sulfur is not a highly reactive element under ordinary condition.
sulphur
Sulfur, which was once known as brimstone, is a pale yellow material that can be found near volcanoes and hot springs.Sulfur is a pale yellow material that can be found near volcanoes and hot springs.
Sulfur is relatively unreactive with the constituents of the Earth's atmosphere and crust under normal conditions. (However, sulfur can react with many of these materials under favorable conditions.)
all mass was created in the big bang It is often found near or around volcanoes. The element of sulphur was created during nuclear fusion in a star like our Sun.
sulpher dioxide. eh Corrected: yes... it's sulfur.. and when you burn sulfur you'll get sulfur dioxide after combuston.
Examples: oxygen, carbon, sulfur, hydrogen, halogens, etc.
Volcanoes often contain sulfur, an element that can smell like rotten eggs.
At room temperature, pure sulfur is a crystalline solid that has a bright yellow color.
Tungsten is an element often found in cheaper light bulbs.
Selenium, the element immediately below sulfur in the same column of a wide form periodic table. (The element immediately above sulfur in the same column, oxygen, is the lightest element in the column, and these lightest elements in a column of main group elements often have chemical properties somewhat different from all the other elements in the column. Sulfur, for example, has a much lower electronegativity than oxygen, while the difference between electronegativities of selenium and sulfur is much less.)