Explorism — Header
What are you looking for?
Esc to close to search
6–9 minutes

What Happened in the First Second After the Big Bang?

Founder of Explorism
Illustration of the first second after the Big Bang showing energy expansion and particle formation

The first second after the Big Bang is the most important second in the history of everything. Not the first million years. Not the first hour. One single second — and within it, the entire fate of matter, energy, and life was locked in forever. Most people know the Big Bang happened. Space expanded, stars formed, galaxies drifted apart, and here we are 13.8 billion years later asking questions about it. But the Big Bang itself is almost beside the point. What happened in the first second after Big Bang is where the real story lives — a story so violent, so strange, and so cosmically decisive that our existence today traces back to fractions of a moment too small to name. Here’s what actually happened. The First Second After the Big Bang: A Timeline of Everything NAOJ, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons Before we go second by second,…

This article is for members only

Log in to your account or create a free one to continue reading.

Free to join · No credit card required

views
Like Dislike
Share Button
Popular this week
Top reads · Explorism
This week
Did You Know Widget
Did You Know?
View all
01 / 45
01

A day on Venus is longer than a year on Venus. It takes 243 Earth days to rotate once, but only 225 Earth days to orbit the Sun.

Browse Categories Widget
Browse Categories
Newsletter Widget
Weekly Briefing
STAY
CURIOUS.

Join 5,000+ readers who get our weekly science digest — verified, deep, and always surprising.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Related posts

Leave a Reply

Comments