In the earlier times of universe materialization, vast hydrogen clouds in space, akin to astronomic dust cloud clusters, were the building blocks of organized matter broken down by blazing suns and dispersed as radiant energy. [1] An electron weighs a little more than 1/2,000th of the smallest atom, hydrogen. [2] In primitive ocean, hydrogen and chlorine combined to render the water faintly acid. [3]
In solar-energy reactions, hydrogen is converted into helium through complex nuclear-reaction chains, with carbon acting as an energy catalyst without being changed. [4]
Mathematics and material science are essential for understanding the material aspects of the universe, but the unpredictability of the union of hydrogen and oxygen atoms into water challenges purely mechanistic explanations. [5]