Actually there is only one element that was formed shortly after the big bang and that is hydrogen. All the other elements were made either by nuclear reactions taking place in the core of burning stars, or by the catastrophic explosion called supernovas that are sometimes produced when stars die. - This is from a highly credible source (book)
Hydrogen. The simplest element
Unanswered questions concerning the Big Bang: 1) What drove the initial expansion of space? 2) Why did inflation stop? 3) What existed before the start of expansion? And does the word "before" have any meaning if there is no time?
The duration of The Big Bang Theory is -1320.0 seconds.
Most scientists believe that an infinite dense singularity existed before the incident known as the Big Bang.
Hydrogen is believed to be the first chemical element created in the universe, formed shortly after the Big Bang. It is the most abundant element in the universe and serves as the building block for all other elements.
Hydrogen. The simplest element
The duration of Not with a Bang is 1800.0 seconds.
The duration of Whizz Whizz Bang Bang is 1680.0 seconds.
This is not known at this time.
Elements are Elemental, you "cannot" create them, they were already here. Man has created many alloy's & composites, but man has never created an "element". This all occurred micro-seconds after the big bang.
Unanswered questions concerning the Big Bang: 1) What drove the initial expansion of space? 2) Why did inflation stop? 3) What existed before the start of expansion? And does the word "before" have any meaning if there is no time?
The duration of The Big Bang Theory is -1320.0 seconds.
The duration of Bang Goes the Theory is 1800.0 seconds.
The duration of Han Liu Bang is 2700.0 seconds.
Most scientists believe that an infinite dense singularity existed before the incident known as the Big Bang.
All gases we know today
Hydrogen is considered the primordial element in the universe because it is the most abundant element, making up about 75% of the universe's elemental mass. It is thought to have been the first element to form after the Big Bang, leading to the creation of stars and eventually heavier elements through nuclear fusion processes.