Is above code an equivalent to int std::a,std::b,std::c;
No.  A using namespace statement means that your code can use members of that namespace without having to qualify them with the namespace's name.
For example, say you have a #include <string> statement followed by a using namespace std; statement.  You can then refer to the std::string class as just string instead.
Or, say you have a #include <iostream> statement followed by a using namespace std; statement.  You can then refer to the std::cin and std::cout objects as just cin and cout, respectively.
Simply using a namespace does not add anything to that namespace.  It is a way of bringing content from the specified namespace into the calling namespace.
If I declared(defined) a namespace Hi after the line using namespace std;. Is Hi a part of std
No.  To do that, Hi would have to be declared inside of a namespace std block, eg:
namespace std {
    namespace Hi {
        ...
    }
}
But, that is undefined behavior (except in special cases), as you are generally not allowed to add things to the std namespace.