There is an excellent and informative recent updated article on this controversy over the Big Bang and new JWST data, by astronomer Guillermo Gonzalez, at https://evolutionnews.org/2023/11/the-bi...two-tests/. It is entitled The Big Bang Survives Two Tests, dated November 2, 2023.
In summary, the article shows that now some time after the first observations from JWST, the Big Bang theory has passed both a strong test and a weak one. That’s not to say there are now absolutely no tensions between theory and observation.
There's more.
(This post was last modified: 2024-01-12, 04:04 PM by nbtruthman. Edited 2 times in total.)
In summary, the article shows that now some time after the first observations from JWST, the Big Bang theory has passed both a strong test and a weak one. That’s not to say there are now absolutely no tensions between theory and observation.
Quote:"As Stephen Meyer pointed out in September 2022, even if the initial JWST observations were taken at face value and showed that galaxy formation did not agree with predictions, it would not disprove the Big Bang theory. It would just show that theories of galaxy formation need revision. This is because the Big Bang theory rests on three observational pillars: the cosmic microwave background radiation, the abundances of the light element (H, He, Li) isotopes, and the Hubble-Lemaître redshift-distance law.
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Well, it looks like some astronomers have done the needed (investigation of this matter). One study compared a suite of cosmological simulations to the JWST observations of distant galaxies. They found that standard early galaxy growth models can explain the JWST observations without invoking nonstandard cosmology or ad hoc fine-tuning of models. In particular, their simulations show that bursty star formation needs to be taken into account in these early times, rather than a smoothly varying one. Neglecting it can lead to biases in estimating the number of bright galaxies in early times.
Another recent study (not yet peer reviewed) concluded that early JWST observations of distant seemingly massive and mature galaxies were misinterpreted. The galaxies they studied were selected according to a certain spectral feature called a double-break (highly redshifted Lyman and Balmer breaks). For five of the galaxies, the colors were due to emission lines in star-forming galaxies which caused them to be misclassified as massive double break galaxies. They observed more galaxies and over multiple fields than the early studies, giving them a much better handle on the statistics. The field-to-field cosmic variations can cause the maximum mass to be vastly overestimated. They conclude that the double-break galaxies they surveyed do not contradict standard cosmology.
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While they haven’t received much attention, a couple other recent studies provide a clean and simple test of the Big Bang theory. One of them determined the age of an ancient star cluster, M92. Clearly, to be consistent with the Big Bang theory the ages of the oldest stars cannot exceed the cosmological age. To date, observations of the cosmic microwave background radiation have yielded the most accurate and precise cosmological age (13.80 ± 0.06 billion years).
M92 is one of about 160 known globular star clusters in the Milky Way galaxy and is estimated to contain about 330,000 stars. Given its proximity, astronomers have been studying it for over a century, each decade bringing to bear better observation tools and/or better models. This latest study yielded an age of 13.80 ± 0.75 billion years and determined that the observations are consistent with the stars in the cluster having formed nearly simultaneously. To date, this is the most accurate and precise determination of age for a group of coeval stars. Within the quoted error, M92 formed up to 0.75 billion years after the Big Bang, which is enough time for M92 to have formed according to standard cosmology. If M92 were found to be, say, 16.5 ± 0.75 billion years, then that would pose a major challenge to the Big Bang theory."
There's more.