Let’s start “fabricating” new atoms without “inventing” other “tools” than the ones we already have available; which are:
1-The universal decreasing density
2-The gravitational stable density.
3-The gravitational fields
4-The protons
5-The electronic effect units (electrons)
The following drawing is of the very first atom to be “created” by the “situation” at that moment:
We can see that the Hydrogen valence shell's density is lesser than the universal density. This is either caused by the faster decreasing density (than expansion) occurring inside the gravitational field by the decaying process preceding the moment when protons appeared, or the fact that all centripetal effect is accumulated at the center, leaving an empty effect in the rest of the gravitational field (before an electronic effect is captured); which is what I agree with.
And space keeps expanding while universal density keeps decreasing.
Meanwhile, some of these new Hydrogen atoms, cruising through space, started to collide to one another. Collisions occurring “face to face” resulted in merging completely both “gravitational fields” of the Hydrogen atoms; creating a heavier atom called a Helium 4 atom.
Stability of the Helium’s nucleus demanded the “creation” of two neutrons which installed in its nucleus as the following drawing shows.
This Helium 4 atom is the most abundant in the universe after Hydrogen.
Most Helium-4 in the Sun and in the universe is thought to have been produced at the beginning of the universe, and is referred to as "primordial Helium". We will see, further on, the star production process.
Helium-4 makes up about one quarter of the ordinary matter in the universe (by mass), with almost all of the rest being hydrogen. Which doesn’t leave very much to produce whatever else we observe today.
Now here are “funny” parts of the official Helium 4 description:
A) “The total spin of the helium-4 nucleus is an integer (zero), and therefore it is a boson”.
This is an “adequate” deduction except that it is the very first boson without any “force vector” attribution (the second one is the Higgs boson), and more astonishingly, it is a boson that responds to the Pauli Exclusion Principle; which is quite a bit disturbing (normal bosons don’t).
B) “The helium atom is the second simplest atom (hydrogen is the simplest), but the extra electron introduces a third "body", so the solution to its wave equation becomes a "three-body problem", which has no analytic solution”.
The funny thing here is that Helium 4 atoms brings back mathematics to its origin’s (prehistoric) way of counting: “One – Two – and - Many-many”.
As for the “no analytic solution” conclusion, it gives quite a blow to the “understanding mathematical power” that most of us cannot conceptualize.
Regarding the stability of the Helium 4 atom, my “T-Model” describes it with the “gravitational field’s density” versus the surrounding universal density at the Time of each events; but if you feel that it’s not complicated enough, you can read the official description on internet, which certainly corrects that and provokes, as additional problems, a lot of not needed questioning:
So we now have a universe inside which a lot of Hydrogen atoms and a few Helium atoms are floating through space. Consequently, collisions between Helium 4 and Hydrogen atoms started to occur, merging them and resulting into new appearing Lithium atoms.
As we can clearly see. The valence (outer) shell of the Lithium atom possesses the same density as the universal field, at their “production’s” moment. So, after a bit more decreasing (expanding) of the universal field’s density, it wasn’t possible anymore to add density in this valence shell in order to get a stable atom’s gravitational field.
No other Hydrogen atom could then merge with a Lithium atom even if its valence shell wasn’t filled.
If there were a few Beryllium atom produced after Lithium, they had only 8 minutes of life span; so they disappeared before any other atoms where produced.
And that is when new atom production stopped. There would be no more atoms “created” before an environment denser than the Lithium valence shell would appear, in order to permit adding electronic effect density to the atomic valence shells.
And that wouldn’t be before the first stars appeared.
Meanwhile, cosmic rays colliding to Helium 4 atoms, where able to extract one neutron from some of their nucleus; which occasioned a re-installment of protons each side of the remaining neutron as the following where the main “falling tendency” resides; meaning the 12 to 6 o’clock angle:
Which resulted in the appearance of a few “free” Neutrons.
At that moment, our universe contained Hydrogen, Helium 4, Helium 3 and Lithium atoms, plus a few “free” Neutrons. Nothing else happened except that these atoms started to “covalence bond” with each other.
We have to note that this “moment” was a lot sooner than what is actually presented officially. Which explains why new found first formed galaxies are a lot older than anticipated.
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