Just out of curiosity, I wrote an SEDE query to plot the total number of first questions, and the fraction of them that are closed, as a function of the account age when asked.
Alas, SEDE doesn't provide enough information about deleted questions to let them be associated with their authors, leading to a considerable systematic error (since closing and deletion tend to be highly correlated). Fortunately, Shog9 was kind enough to re-run the query on the full SO database and post the resulting graph. Here's what it looks like:
(If you're curious about how this compares with the original graph I made, without deleted questions, you can find it in the edit history of this answer.)
The x-axis is the base 10 logarithm of the account age in seconds. The major peak in the total first question counts (blue line) is centered around 103 seconds ≈ 15 minutes; apparently, that's how long it takes for most people to ask their first question after registering, with most of the variation falling within plus or minus a factor of 10 of that (i.e. 1.5 minutes to 2.5 hours).
The red line in the graph, which shows the fraction of first questions that are closed, does show a certain amount of time-dependence. Ignoring the crazy wiggles on the left below the one second mark (which are almost certainly just random noise, amplified by dividing one small random number with another), the closure rate of first questions does peak at about 102.2 seconds ≈ 2.5 minutes after account creation, with over a quarter of all questions asked that quickly getting closed eventually.
Conversely, on the other side of the big peak in the blue line, the red line drops to a minimum around 103.5 seconds ≈ 1 hour, with only about 11% of questions asked at that point getting closed. (After that, the rate starts climbing again a bit, peaking at about 18% for questions asked 105.1 seconds ≈ 1.5 days after account creation.)
That said, the difference between the highest and lowest first question closure rate is still only a factor of about 2.5. And the highest peak in the fraction of first questions closed corresponds to a rather low overall first question rate — sure, questions asked less than 5 minutes (≈ 102.5 seconds) after account creation do have a relatively high risk of getting closed, but very few first questions are asked that quickly to begin with, so any intervention that only targets that small group of questions is unlikely to have much effect on the overall first question closure rate on SO.
Also, it's important to remember that, as any statistician will tell you, correlation does not imply causation. While these results do seem to somewhat support the impression that, on average, bad first questions tend to be asked a bit sooner after registering than good ones, that doesn't necessarily mean that forcing the authors of bad questions to wait a few minutes would cause them to improve their question at all.
Or, to put it in other words, a perfectly consistent explanation of these results would simply be that almost all new users actually ask their first question immediately after registering — the better questions just take, on average, a bit longer to type in.
Ps. The funny-looking oscillations in the blue line near 105 seconds ≈ 1 day can be explained by the fact that people have circadian rhythms, and so the time between registration and first question tends to cluster around multiples of 24 hours. The upward slope on the right, peaking at 107.5 seconds (= almost exactly one year) is a kind of an artifact of the exponential binning method used to plot the data; the rate of first-question-asking isn't actually increasing, but the bins into which the questions are grouped by account age before they're counted get exponentially wider the further right you go on the graph. After one year, the frequency of first questions starts to fall off faster than exponentially, presumably due to the automatic deletion of old unused user accounts.