Some time ago I put together a brief summary of what happened in the first second after the big bang. It doesn't answer your question directly but it may be of some interest to you.
Apparently, most cosmologists don't like the term 'the big bang' even though it's widely recognised as the term used to describe the beginning of the universe, most prefer the 'big stretch' or 'expansion' as apposed to the idea of an explosion.
The 4 fundamental forces-
Force, Relative Strength, Interaction
Gravity, 1 x G, Objects of mass
Weak, 10^25 x G, Types of nuclear decay
Electromagnetic, 10^36 x G, Atomic/chemical structures, electromagnetic phenomena
Strong, 10^38 x G, Nucleus structure
From between zero and 10^-43 seconds (the Planck epoch) a bubble of incredibly dense and hot energy appeared within a space approx. 10^20 smaller than the size of a proton (a Planck length, 10^-33 cm). Within this bubble, the supersymmetry that maintained that the 4 fundamental forces (gravity, electromagnetic, weak & strong) all had the same strength and were unified into one single fundamental force (the superforce) collapsed. (What exists when supersymmetry is in place is unknown, future experiments with particle accelerators and the advancement of M-theory might shed some light on this state). Gravity began to separate from the other forces and at 10^-33 seconds, the strong force began to separate (the 2 remaining forces, electromagnetism and weak, were still bound as the electroweak force). The universe then began to inflate rapidly. One theory for the rapid cosmic inflation is that the separation of the fundamental forces created a sort of anti-gravity (or inflaton field) that filled empty space with 'vacuum energy', pushing the fabric of space to expand without diluting itself in the process. This is like a dam breaking and the false vacuum- the dammed river- releasing a tremendous amount of force as it returned to its true vacuum state- sea level. The primordial universe expanded at faster than the speed of light to the size a galaxy in less than a picosecond, and kept going. Quarks and antiquarks formed soon after. Electromagnetism and the weak force separated at the end of the electroweak epoch at 10^-12 seconds resulting in the 4 fundamental forces as they are today. At 1 microsecond, electrons and positrons formed, quarks combined to create protons and neutrons. 1 second after the big bang, protons and neutrons bind to create atomic nuclei.
Steve