i have a chocolate of 1kg if a ate1/2part of the chocolate so what weigh of will be
Anonymous:
hlo
Answers
Answered by
0
It weighs 500gm because you ate half.
pls brainlist for a brother.
pls brainlist for a brother.
Answered by
9
I've been looking for a chance to answer this question. Thanks!
For the most part, the mass that you gain doesn't come from the food that you eat. No, really. It comes from the food that you eat next. When you eat, your body turns the caloric portion of what you eat into energy.
Let's take a pound of chocolate as an example. You can't immediately gain any more than a pound because, as other respondents have answered, your body can't create mass. A pound of chocolate weighs the same as a pound of water, and you can't add more than a pound to your body mass by eating a pound of chocolate any more than you can by drinking a pound of water (about two cups).
But a pound of chocolate is worth a little under 2,500 calories, so the next few pounds of food that you eat, your body can't spend. So it converts it (mostly to fat) and stores it. So the amount that you gain depends on two things:
How many calories (not pounds) your body has ready access to.How much mass (not calories) you eat once your body doesn't need any more calories.
For the most part, the mass that you gain doesn't come from the food that you eat. No, really. It comes from the food that you eat next. When you eat, your body turns the caloric portion of what you eat into energy.
Let's take a pound of chocolate as an example. You can't immediately gain any more than a pound because, as other respondents have answered, your body can't create mass. A pound of chocolate weighs the same as a pound of water, and you can't add more than a pound to your body mass by eating a pound of chocolate any more than you can by drinking a pound of water (about two cups).
But a pound of chocolate is worth a little under 2,500 calories, so the next few pounds of food that you eat, your body can't spend. So it converts it (mostly to fat) and stores it. So the amount that you gain depends on two things:
How many calories (not pounds) your body has ready access to.How much mass (not calories) you eat once your body doesn't need any more calories.
Similar questions