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.
Sulfur
1kg - dry ash 2kg - wet ash 3kg - ash.
cotton
sulphur.now answer this for me :D2a-8b-3abif a=-3, if b=6the answer is annoying but whatever :)
Sugar is the answer.........
It is only a metal that is 2kg when burnt will be 3kg because of the resulting metal oxide.
if it is dry it is 2 kg, wet 1 kg and burnt 3 kg. That is how we can translate it.
None. The mass of an object won't change if you change the state of matter. When you burn it, the mass can change, since the atoms of the original object combine with oxygen, usually.
I purchased 1Kg dry ice blocks from this store for about 300 yen each in 2008 and 2009. Many countries produce dry ice (solid carbon dioxide), including Japan.
Sulfur is closely match this puzzle. The density of 2 kg sulfur is double than 1 kg water. So if you weigh the sulfur in immersed state, the weight of sulfur will be 1 kg. Sulfur will displace about 1 kg water and will lose the same weight. After taking out of water, 2 kg sulfur will be 2 kg only. When you burn the sulfur, it will combine with 2 kg oxygen and you will get 4 kg of sulfur bi oxide. So it is fairly close to the answer. 3 kg literally means more than 2 kg. May be you know the better answer.
It equals one kilpod.
A kilo IS a kilo - They are the SAME > . . . Answer The kilo of wet paint, dried, will weigh less. Another answer However, a kilo of dried paint chips still weighs a kilo.