by the big bang. the big bang happened and caused different gasses floating everywhere and combining to form different gasses like atom
Carbon came first. Carbon is one of the most abundant elements in the universe and is formed in the core of stars through nuclear fusion reactions. Oxygen, on the other hand, is also formed in stars but typically in later stages of stellar evolution.
Carbon is formed in the cores of stars and distributed into space during the death of stars.
No, carbon was not the first atom created after the Big Bang. The first atoms that formed were hydrogen and helium, and heavier elements like carbon were produced later through processes like stellar nucleosynthesis in the cores of stars.
The stars throughout the disk.
What do you mean? Of course they formed, otherwise we wouldn't have stars.
The elements carbon, oxygen, and iron were formed in the interiors of stars that have since dies and exploded, spreading their contents through dust clouds that later formed other stars and solar systems.
First beryllium is formed, followed by carbon
Scientists do not make "star fuel," and stars, for the most part are not fueled by carbon, anyway. Stars are mostly fueled by hydrogen which was formed in the very early history of the universe, shortly after the "Big Bang." To learn more about how stars formed and what make them "burn", you should go to a website like http://www.kidsastronomy.com/
Carbon is formed in stars through nuclear fusion processes during the later stages of stellar evolution. During these processes, helium nuclei are fused together to form carbon atoms. This occurs in stars with sufficient mass and temperature to initiate these nuclear reactions.
The first population III stars formed about 400 million years after the big bang. The first black holes would have formed when these stars exploded, about a few millions years later.See related link for a timeline of the big bang.
The first stars formed in clouds of predominantly hydrogen and helium gas. These clouds were massive and dense, collapsing under their own gravity to ignite nuclear fusion in their cores, marking the birth of the first generation of stars in the universe.
Carbon is a naturally occurring element that is formed through nuclear fusion in stars, primarily in the cores of massive stars through processes like the triple-alpha process. These processes involve the fusion of helium nuclei to produce carbon atoms.