No, you can't get back burnt substances to their original state as combustion is an irreversible reaction.
Yes
To get each substance back to its original form, you would typically need to reverse the process that caused the change. This may involve applying heat, cooling, filtering, or other chemical reactions to separate the substances and return them to their original state. Additionally, some substances may not be able to revert back to their original form once they have undergone a chemical change.
A substance that can be brought back to its original state is one that undergoes a physical change rather than a chemical change. For example, water can be frozen into ice and then melted back into liquid form, returning to its original state. Similarly, the melting of wax can be reversed by cooling it, restoring it to its original solid form. In contrast, substances that undergo chemical changes, like burning paper, cannot be reverted to their original state.
Once coal has been burnt, it undergoes a chemical change and cannot be reversed back to its original state. The combustion process alters the composition of coal at a molecular level, making it impossible to revert to its pre-burnt form.
Those are chemical reactions.
Yes, because the substances can be separated apart physically.
No, it is impossible.
Extradition is the process when a fugitive flees to another state and is apprehended then sent back to the original state in which they fled.
yes he transforms back after battle
The process of repairing and restoring a vehicle back to its original state is referred to as automotive restoration. Through this process, one reverts one's vehicle to its original, authentic state, without any updating or upgrades.
There are several different types of recordable DVD, newer DVD players can generally play any type back but earlier ones could only play back one type of DVD. Even though CD's look similar to DVD's they are quite different.
To restore.