ylem

listen to the pronunciation of ylem
İngilizce - İngilizce
In the Big Bang theory, the hot and dense plasma of which the cosmos consisted at the time of recombination in an early stage of its expansion and cooling, when the first atoms formed and photons decoupled, the source of the cosmic background radiation
(cosmology) the original matter that (according to the big bang theory) existed before the formation of the chemical elements
ylem

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    y·lem

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    Etimoloji

    () Resuscitation of Middle English ylem, one of several variants for the Medieval Latin hyle (“matter”), a transliteration of Aristotle’s concept of “(fundamental) matter”, in Ancient Greek ὕλη (hulē, “wood(s), material(s), matter, subject”) or πρώτη ὕλη (“fundamental matter”). First known to have been used in modern English by George Gamow in a paper coauthored with Alpher and Bethe titled "The Origin of Chemical Elements", published in Physical Review, April 1st, 1948. Note: Claimed to have been found by Robert Herman in a large dictionary. In an interview Gamow also associated ylem with a Hebrew word, which should have been ילם (substantive “blind”), similar in pronunciation and appropriate for the hypothetical darkness of ylem.