How did the universe’s elements form?

The journey of the elements starts in the earliest moments of the Big Bang, when our universe was only a few seconds to a few minutes old

We all know the universe contains a vast array of elements, ranging from light gases, such as helium, to heavy metals, like lead. But where did all of the elements come from?

At that time, the entire cosmos was crammed into a volume millions of times smaller than it is today.

Due to the incredibly high densities, the average temperature of all the material in the universe was well over a billion degrees, which is more than hot enough for nuclear reactions to take place.

In fact, it was so hot that even protons and neutrons could not exist as stable entities. Instead, the universe was just a sea of more fundamental particles, called quarks and gluons, seething in a raw plasma state.

But the universe would not stay that way for long. It was expanding, which means it was also cooling. Eventually, the quarks could bind together to form the first protons and neutrons without instantly getting demolished.

Protons are ever so slightly lighter than neutrons, which gave them an edge in this initial phase of particle production. Once the universe was a few minutes old, it was far too cold to create new protons and neutrons.

So those first heavy particles were the only ones the universe was ever going to make (outside of future rare high-energy interactions).

By the time the heavy particles finally froze out, there were roughly six protons for every neutron. Neutrons by themselves aren’t stable; they decay with a half-life of around 880 seconds.

Immediately, some of the neutrons began to decay away, while the remainder started binding with protons to form the first atomic nuclei. Of all the light elements, helium-4, which consists of two protons and two neutrons, has the largest binding energy, which means it’s the easiest to form and the hardest to break apart.

So almost all of those neutrons went into the production of helium-4.

From calculations like this, cosmologists can predict that the universe started out with a mixture of roughly 75% hydrogen (which is just a bare proton), 25% helium and a small scattering of lithium — which is exactly what astronomers observe.

Stellar nucleosynthesis

The next stage in the appearance of the elements had to wait for the first generation of stars, which didn’t start shining until hundreds of millions of years after the Big Bang. Stars power themselves through nuclear fusion, transmuting hydrogen into helium.

This process leaves a tiny bit of energy left over. But stars have so much hydrogen available that they can burn for billions of years.

Near the ends of their lives, stars like the sun switch to fusing helium instead, turning it into carbon and oxygen before they die as planetary nebulae. This is why carbon and oxygen are so abundant in the universe; after hydrogen and helium, they are the most commonly produced elements.

In fact, oxygen is the most common element on Earth, although most of it is bound up with silicates to form the ground beneath your feet.

More massive stars — those with at least eight times the mass of the sun — fuse even heavier elements in their cores. Especially in their final weeks, days and even hours, the most massive stars in the universe create nitrogen, neon, silicon, sulfur, magnesium, nickel, chromium and iron.

Aftermath nucleosynthesis

That’s the end of the line for the formation of elements within stars. Their intense energies are perfectly capable of producing heavier elements, but fusing anything above iron saps energy, rather than producing it, so those heavier elements appear only rarely in the cores of massive stars.

Instead, the rest of the elements in the periodic table are produced when stars die, which they do through a variety of fascinating, complicated and spectacular means. Smaller stars slowly turn themselves inside out, spewing their guts all across their stellar systems.

Larger stars explode in violent cataclysms known as supernovas. Both kinds of deaths leave remnants. In the case of small stars, they leave white dwarfs, which are made almost entirely of carbon and oxygen.

Larger stars leave behind incredibly dense spheres of neutrons known as neutron stars.

Gas from a companion star can fall onto a white dwarf, causing it to trigger its own kind of supernova blast. Neutron stars can collide with each other, releasing an enormous amount of energy in an event known as a kilonova.

No matter what, all of these processes involve a lot of radiation, a lot of energy and a lot of particles flying around at high speed — in other words, the perfect soup for fashioning new elements.

It’s through these calamities that the rest of the periodic table came into being.

It’s also through these energetic events that these elements spread beyond the bounds of their home stars and out into the interstellar mix.

There, those elements join new gas clouds, which eventually coalesce to form new generations of stars that continue the process of elemental recycling and regeneration, slowly enriching the universe.

See more here space.com

Header image: Getty Images

About the author: Paul M. Sutter is an astrophysicist at SUNY Stony Brook and the Flatiron Institute in New York City. Paul received his PhD in Physics from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2011, and spent three years at the Paris Institute of Astrophysics, followed by a research fellowship in Trieste, Italy.

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Comments (5)

  • Avatar

    Ryan

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    The universe just put it all together. It somehow intelligently just put thing just in the right place without an intelligent designer. Wow what a fantasy all these people live in.
    Collosians 1:16  For by him were all things created, that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things were created by him, and for him: 

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Howdy

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    “when our universe was only a few seconds to a few minutes old”
    What caused the universe then? What caused the base elements that caused the universe to even exist then? What caused those base elements to exist, and so on.
    Answer that.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Allan Shelton

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    Since Lemaitre was a Christian priest, he needed a theory that could be connected to God.
    Georges Lemaître
    According to the Big Bang theory, the expansion of the observable universe began with the explosion of a single particle at a definite point in time. Georges Lemaître, (1894-1966), Belgian cosmologist, Catholic priest, and father of the Big Bang theory.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Shawn Marshall

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    I wonder if ore deposits argue against this star formation theory

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Aldonichts

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    H.P.B. lo dijo ya todo.

    Reply

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