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Was the sky the first thing to be made in the universe, what made the sky.?

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Was the sky the first thing to be made in the universe, what made the sky.?

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  1. i think the first thing to be made in the universe is the Lightness and the Darkness....


  2. well scientifically the sky is the reflection of the sunlight from the oceans reflecting back onto the several layers of atmosphere that surround the earth.

    However the sky is just made up of a bunch of different gasses so technically it wasn't the sky until all of those gasses came to exist so i guess the answer is no, the sky wasn't the first thing to be made in the universe.

  3. Disfolical Objects In Space Traveled From Space To Earth it took 20 Billion Years For it To Reach The Earths Atomsphere. It is bean Conjoined With Air Folicals And Objects From Mid-Space. They Formed A Smokey Object From The Air, And The Folicals Wich made them See-able.

    They Are no longer left. Clouds Noadays Are made By Smoke Machings and Company.s

  4. 'Sky' is only the appearance to the human eye, like the Rainbow. There is nothing physically there. Sky is not a scientific term that you can deal with.

  5. actuly sky is not a thing to be made sky is empty space

  6. Well, before the Universe was created, there were a bunch of Higgs Boson, and some others sub atomic particles floating around..

  7. The big bang or god what Eva helps u sleep at night

  8. no. the sky or atmosphere is only found on planets, which were made after stars

  9. No, the first thing to be made in the universe, at least as we can determine with any certainty, was a sort of hot plasma of quarks (the particles that make up protons, neutrons, etc.) and gluons (the particles that cause quarks to interact and hold atomic nuclei together). This was about 13.7 billion years ago.

    The "sky", our atmosphere, wasn't formed until our planet had coalesced, about 4.5 billon years ago. At first it was mostly carbon dioxide, ammonia and water vapour, with a little nitrogen, released by volcanic activity, but much of the carbon dioxide became dissolved in the seas as they formed, leaving behind the unreactive nitrogen (some of which was formed from the ammonia breaking down). Then as cyanobacteria appeared, about 3.3 billion years ago, they started photosynthesizing the carbon dioxide into oxygen, which brings us to an oxygen atmosphere such as we enjoy today.

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