1.) how .bss and .data are written to RAM as i am using FLASH Loader for burning my program onto flash?
Code, constant data and initialized data are all written to FLASH. At runtime, initialized data is copied to bss during startup. Constant data is usually accessed directly (you declare it with the "const" keyword).
2.) Is there any index kind of thing in the final binary which discriminates between .text and .bss segments?
I think you mean by "binary" the linker output. This is usually referred to as an object file and is different from a binary image. The object file includes all code, data, symbol, debug information and memory addresses. For the GCC tool chain, the linker output is usually an .elf file.
Your linker uses a "link script" or other definition file to locate the various segments at the appropriate memory addresses. Your tool chain should have docs on how to change that.
3.) Is there any utility in the linker/locator which converts our simple binary into hex format?
The "objcopy" utility will read linker output and can write output files in a variety of formats, including Intel-hex. For human readable output see "objdump".
4.) How can I discriminate between .text and .bss from the contents of hex file?
By memory address. GCC uses the "initialized data" segment for data which is copied to the bss. It is located according to your linker script.
Intel-hex format: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_HEX
GCC: http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/