Um it just does
Hydrogen and Helium are the two most common elements in the universe.
The ratio of sulphur to all other elements, in the universe, is 0.
the answer to your first question is that without nuclear fusion in the heart of stars there would only be the most basic elements like hydrogen and helium. other elements such as carbon are made when those are fused together different stars can make different elements depending on there size but that all stops at iron once iron is formed it obsorbes the rest of the energy and the star goes supernova. the supernova blasts the stars core outward. because of this the iron or other matter slams into other particles in the process fusing together making heavier elements such as gold or uranium making them so rare. the overall point being that if there was not nuclear fusion you and me and everything else in the universe would just be a giant gas cloud. for your second question the answer is as simple as thats just how the universe works.
Hydrogen - from it all other elements are made in the stars
Chemical elements are formed in the Universe by stellar nucleosynthesis.
fusion reactions in stars
No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.
no there is not once you enter a black hole you are crushed but your matter can be possibly shot out as radiation but other than that no there is no other universe or dimension based on my research
Roughly 75% of the normal matter in the universe is hydrogen. Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe and is found in stars, gas clouds, and other cosmic structures. Its simplicity and abundance make it a key building block in the formation of other elements and structures in the universe.
Expanding black holes don't mean the end of the universe. It is true that we don't know enough about the universe to be able to see an "end" in sight. But right now the universe is expanding, and the immense gravity of even black holes (and other matter) doesn't seem to be slowing it up at all.
Black metals are typically composed of iron and carbon, with small amounts of other elements such as manganese, silicon, and sulfur. These elements give black metals their characteristic dark color and strength.
Considering the other oddity's in the Universe; Neutron stars, pulsars, Wolf Rayet stars, magnetar or even hypernovas, I don't think black holes are that odd.