[quote=pelathais;302606]Remember Einstein's famous equation?
E = mc2
Quote:
As the expansion progressed things cooled down, just the way an expanding gas will cool your refrigerator. The cooling in the early universe allowed the energy to coalesce and subatomic particles formed. This is unlikely to happen in your refrigerator, however. The subatomic particles (baryons, leptons and stuff) then formed hydrogen and a very small amount of helium (I'm skipping some things for brevity).
The hydrogen then formed along "creases" in the fabric of space and began to clump together to form stars and quasars. The quasars (in a process that we don't have pinned down yet) appeared to draw in more hydrogen to produce the first proto-galaxies. In other cases galaxies appear to have formed in the absence of quasars, or something happened to the quasar. The stars would then fuse the hydrogen into heavier elements and "slough" off the produce (along with unfused hydrogen) into the surrounding space. When they got to the heaviest elements like iron and upward - only the blast of a supernova was needed to create things like uranium.
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Are we able to duplicate any of those on any level to prove it? It still is hard for me to grasp where all matter came from, including the differences in elements.
BTW do you believe in ID? It seems to me the arrangement of atomic and sub-atomic particles might be an indication of Intelligent Design.