The answer is BeS
Physical mass (of the sun and the planets, plus asteroids, etc.) plus space.
$2,000,000 a year plus bonuses. LOL!
Equal amounts of red, blue, and yellow make basic grey.
blue plus yellow make green
Generally, they make the basic salary plus a little above for doing extra work as head teachers.
Boron, silicon, germanium, arsenic, antimony, and tellurium are recognised. These elements include, hydrogen, beryllium, nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfur, zinc, gallium.
Beryllium the element (Be) has a zero charge. Beryllium the ion (Be^2+) as a plus 2 charge.
When hydrogen, lithium, and beryllium atoms combine, they form a molecule with the chemical formula LiHBe. This molecule would have a unique set of properties based on the different characteristics of each element.
There are four electrons in a Beryllium atom. Hence the mono positive ion has only three electrons. Therefore the electron configuration is 1s2 2s1.
To balance silver plus sulfur, you would need to write the chemical equation for the reaction between silver and sulfur. Then, adjust the coefficients of each reactant to ensure that the number of atoms of each element is the same on both sides of the equation. This will give you the balanced equation for the reaction between silver and sulfur.
To balance the equation for sulfur plus oxygen gas yielding sulfur dioxide, you need to ensure that the number of atoms of each element is the same on both sides of the equation. The balanced equation is: S + O₂ → SO₂. This equation is already balanced, with one sulfur atom and two oxygen atoms on each side.
It's formula is BeF2 .
Food consists of CHON : carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen. Plus tiny traces of sulfur and other minerals.
This is a Composition Reaction (also known as Formation Reaction).... element + element ------> compound
The chemical equation for germanium plus sulfur is Ge + S -> GeS.
Sulfur-34 has two neutrons plus.
It is safer to claim it as neither - not least because the reaction would/does not work. Far safer to say that the sulphur is oxidised (which, you could argue, makes it a reducing agent).