The James Webb telescope has brought cosmology to a tipping point. Will it soon reveal new physics?

Right now, it looks like cosmology is at a tipping point. Will the James Webb telescope resolve the issue by revealing new physics?

An image of purple glittering stars
(Image credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/SAO; Infrared: (Herschel) ESA/NASA/Caltech, (Spitzer) NASA/JPL/Caltech, (WISE) NASA/JPL/Caltech; Infrared: NASA/ESA/CSA/STScI/Webb ERO Production Team; Image processing: NASA/CXC/SAO/J. Major, CC BY)

For the past few years, a series of controversies have rocked the well-established field of cosmology. In a nutshell, the predictions of the standard model of the universe appear to be at odds with some recent observations.

There are heated debates about whether these observations are biased, or whether the cosmological model, which predicts the structure and evolution of the entire universe, may need a rethink. Some even claim that cosmology is in crisis. Right now, we do not know which side will win. But excitingly, we are on the brink of finding that out.

Andreea Font

Andreea Font is a theoretical cosmologist and reader in Theoretical Astrophysics at Liverpool John Moores University. Andrea’s interests are in the formation and evolution of galaxies, in particular in the formation of the Milky Way. To this aim, Andrea builds computer simulations that follow the evolution of Milky Way-type galaxies since their birth until the present time. Andrea also has an interest in deciphering the nature of dark matter and currently works on how we can distinguish between various possible dark matter models by using the chemical and kinematical signatures of stars in the Milky Way.