Has JWST already falsified dark-matter-driven galaxy formation?
Moritz Haslbauer (Bonn), Pavel Kroupa (Bonn, Prague), Akram Hasani, Zonoozi (Zanjan), Hosein Haghi (Zanjan)

TL;DR
This paper examines whether early JWST observations of massive high-redshift galaxies challenge the standard $ ext{Lambda}$CDM model, finding that observed stellar masses exceed model predictions unless alternative star formation histories or initial mass functions are considered.
Contribution
It demonstrates that current $ ext{Lambda}$CDM models underpredict stellar masses of early galaxies, suggesting the need for revised star formation or initial mass function assumptions.
Findings
Observed galaxies are over an order of magnitude more massive than model predictions.
Alternative star formation histories can reduce the stellar mass estimates.
A top-heavy initial mass function at high redshift can alleviate the mass tension.
Abstract
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) discovered several luminous high-redshift galaxy candidates with stellar masses of at photometric redshifts which allows to constrain galaxy and structure formation models. For example, Adams et al. identified the candidate ID 1514 with located at and Naidu et al. found even more distant candidates labeled as GL-z11 and GL-z13 with at and at , respectively. Assessing the computations of the IllustrisTNG (TNG50-1 and TNG100-1) and EAGLE projects, we investigate if the stellar mass buildup as predicted by the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
