Sulfur
The object is a sponge. It weighs 2kg when dry, 1kg when wet (due to water absorption), and 3kg when burned (due to the release of gases and combustion byproducts).
1kg - dry ash 2kg - wet ash 3kg - ash.
The item weighs 2kg when dry but only 1kg when wet, suggesting that 1kg of water weight is lost when the item gets wet. When the item burns, it should weigh 3kg, which means it gains an additional 2kg during the burning process.
Ek mishri hai jo gili ho to 2kg, sukhi ho to 1kg aur jal jaaye to 3kg ka weight hota hai.
Chintu ki sahasikta to avashyak hai. :)
No.. it cannot be so. anything will weigh more in wet condition. After the moisture is evoperated the weigh become less. Even when burnt the ash cannot wegh more than the original article. Ramar Pilli's herbal petrol episode ended only oh this point.
3kg is greater than 3g 1kg = 1000g
Some objects that weigh between 2kg to 3kg include a laptop, a small bag of rice, a hardcover book, and a medium-sized watermelon.
hathi
hathi
if it is dry it is 2 kg, wet 1 kg and burnt 3 kg. That is how we can translate it.