Early Structure Formation from Cosmic String Loops in Light of Early JWST Observations
Hao Jiao, Robert Brandenberger, Alexandre Refregier (McGill, ETH, Zurich)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how cosmic string loops could influence early galaxy formation, potentially explaining recent JWST observations of high-redshift galaxies, and compares their effects with standard cosmological models.
Contribution
It provides a novel calculation of halo and stellar mass functions seeded by cosmic strings, linking string parameters to observable high-redshift galaxy data.
Findings
Cosmic strings with Gμ ≈ 10^{-8} can account for early JWST galaxy observations.
String-seeded halos dominate at redshifts z > 12.
The predicted maximum galaxy mass aligns with the heaviest observed JWST galaxy.
Abstract
Cosmic strings, if they exist, source nonlinear and non-Gaussian perturbations all the way back to the time of equal matter and radiation (and earlier). Here, we compute the mass function of halos seeded by a scaling distribution of cosmic string loops, and we compare the results with the predictions of the standard Gaussian CDM model. Assuming a simple linear relation between stellar mass and halo mass, we also compute the stellar mass function. The contribution of cosmic strings dominates at sufficiently high redshifts where depends on the mass of the halo and on the mass per unit length of the strings and is of the order for . We find that strings with this value of can explain the preliminary JWST data on the high redshift stellar mass density. Based on an extreme value statistic, we find that the mass of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
