That depends by what level of "stick together" you are talking about. For example, quarks and gluons combined to form protons and neutrons, approximately one millionth of a second after the Big Bang. For other levels of "sticking together", check the Wikipedia article on the Big Bang.
Gravity.
gravity
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At the time of the big bang (approximately 13.7 billion years ago) there was no solid matter in the universe, it was all energy, located in space and time. The universe had to cool down considerably before some of the energy was able to condense into matter.
the big bang was not very cool it was very hot almost of trillions of degrees in temperature.
It was so small it could of all fit in a tea cup. my teacher told me. true true. Fill a pin-head, I have read. Ryan92394 says: There was no matter at the time of the big bang. Matter came into existence 380,000 years after the big bang when the universe was cool enough for atoms to form. If your wondering how big the singularity was before the big bang, it was only a few microns in diameter. This is so small that you could not see it with the largest microscope in the world.
At the start of the universe all the electrons were zipping around like crazy because everything was super hot. Then the universe expanded enough to cool down and all the building blocks of atoms slowed down enough to combine into elements. When matter is present it affects the fabric of space time to make gravity. Gravity pulls matter together and stars are born. The key elements for this is that the universe is cool enough, and there is enough time. One theory suggests that matter attracted other matter. Another theory suggests that dark matter pulled or pushed baryonic matter (normal atomic matter) together. Still another theory suggests that cosmic strings (flaws in space-time) create deep gravity wells and attracted matter that slowly coalesced into gas clouds, stars, and planets.
Some 13 or 14 billion years ago, all the existing matter in the Universe was very close together, extremely hot, and extremely dense. It started to expand, a process known as the "Big Bang", matter gradually cooled down, until it was cool enough to form neutrons, protons, later nuclei, and much, much later, galaxies, etc. It is not currently known what caused this Big Bang, what was before it (if there even WAS a "before"), what caused it, and whether this was an isolated event, or perhaps it has happened many times, leading to various universes.
You get the tracing paper and put your beads on your template and put them in between the tracing paper. Next iron over and they should stick together if this doesn't work just keep on ironing and then take the stuck together beads and take them off the template and let to cool down. There you go!
Yes.
No... A matter of opinion but yes, ... its cool.
a piece of wood from a tree.
"Love Will Keep Us Together" by The Captain And Tennile.
The Eleventh Doctor's main catchphrases are: 'Geronimo!', 'Bow ties are cool' and for the big bang episode, 'fezzes are cool'
no! but it would be cool tho rite? by, stick arena master123