The JWST and standard cosmology
A. A. Coley

TL;DR
Recent JWST observations of massive galaxies at high redshift challenge standard cosmology, prompting exploration of exotic solutions like modified gravity, primordial black holes, cosmological bounces, and spikes for early structure formation.
Contribution
This paper discusses novel theoretical possibilities, including cosmological bounces and spikes, to explain early massive galaxy formation beyond standard cosmological models.
Findings
Massive galaxies at high redshift challenge standard cosmology.
Exotic mechanisms like bounces and spikes could explain early structure formation.
Abstract
Recent observations from the James Webb Space Telescope have identified a population of massive galaxy sources () at , formed less than 700 Myr after the Big Bang. Such massive galaxies do not have enough time to form within the standard cosmological model, and hence these observations significantly challenge standard cosmology. A number of possible solutions to this problem have been put forward, including an enhancement of the gravitational force in a modified theory of gravity and the claim that massive primordial black holes, which were created in the early universe before galaxy formation, might provide seeds for galaxies and black holes to subsequently form. We discuss two more exotic possibilities. Black holes can persist through a cosmological bounce and constitute large seeds formed in the previous cosmic cycle existing before current galaxy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
