No.
It states that matter cooled as all space in all parts of our Universe EXPANDED in all directions.
Contrary to a popular misconception -- not helped by misleading or ignorant popular presentations -- Big Bang Cosmology does NOT state that matter exploded out from a central point into empty space. Rather, it states that SPACE ITSELF expanded at all points in our Universe, reducing the density and temperature of the matter within this expanding space.
True
During the Big Bang, all of the space, time, matter, and energy in the Universe was created. This giant explosion hurled matter in all directions and caused space itself to expand. As the Universe cooled, the material in it combined to form galaxies, stars, and planets.
After the big bang when the temperature of the universe cooled down, the gases combined to form matter in the form of planets.
Light is not the origin of the universe. The universe began with the Big Bang, a rapid expansion of space and time. Light is a form of electromagnetic radiation that was produced after the Big Bang as the universe cooled down and matter began to form.
Quarks. Up and down quarks, I think. Google quark.
Yes, after the Big Bang, the universe rapidly expanded and cooled down, allowing particles to come together and form matter. This matter eventually spread out unevenly, clumping together due to gravity to form structures like galaxies and stars.
Gaseous matter.
In fact, the matter already started out as a gas. Only when the Universe cooled down quite a lot was it possible to form galaxies, planets, etc.
Plasma is the most common type of matter in the universe
When a liquid is cooled to its freezing point, the tiny particles of matter slow down and lose energy, causing them to come closer together and form a more organized structure. This results in the liquid transitioning to a solid state as the particles arrange into a fixed, orderly pattern.
It is not currently known why there is more matter than antimatter. Some assymetries (differences between matter and antimatter) have been found, but they are very slight, and it is not clear how this could have been enough to create the matter we see today.
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