Discovery of Spinless Early Galaxy Challenges Current Cosmological Models and Merger Theories

May 10, 2026
Discovery of Spinless Early Galaxy Challenges Current Cosmological Models and Merger Theories
  • A recently identified, non-rotating galaxy from the early universe shows mature dynamics much faster than simulations currently predict, suggesting rapid dynamical settling can occur.

  • If such spinless early galaxies are more common than expected, cosmological models may need to rethink merger timing and geometry or the feedback processes that suppress star formation.

  • XMM-VID1-2075, a distant early galaxy observed by JWST, shows no rotation and has ceased star formation, challenging expectations for galaxy growth timelines.

  • The team intends to search for additional spinless galaxies in the early universe to test theories by comparing observations with simulations.

  • Overall, the discovery could rewrite parts of the galaxy maturation timeline, influencing our understanding of mass assembly, merger rates, and quenching in the early universe.

  • Researchers plan to expand the sample with ongoing JWST surveys, performing spectroscopic follow-ups to refine ages, metallicities, and merger histories, and using deeper imaging to verify merger debris.

  • A proposed scenario suggests a single head-on merger between oppositely rotating galaxies could erase angular momentum within a few hundred million years, producing a slow-rotating, compact system.

  • Three galaxies from the MAGAZ3NE survey were analyzed with JWST: one rotates, one has an irregular structure, and XMM-VID1-2075 shows strong random motions with no coherent spin.

  • These JWST results demonstrate a spectrum of early dynamical states and showcase JWST’s ability to resolve internal motions in galaxies more than 11 billion years ago.

  • The galaxy is extraordinarily massive for its era, having formed many stars but no longer forming new ones, making it an especially compelling target.

  • The study, led by Ben Forrest of UC Davis and published May 4 in Nature Astronomy, involved an international team with funding from NASA, STScI, and NSF.

  • Evidence for a recent major merger—seen as off-center light consistent with merger debris—supports the rapid-formation scenario over a multi-merger path to slow rotation.

Summary based on 2 sources


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