In the distant past, before galaxies emerged from the primordial matter created by the Big Bang, the Universe was a vast, unformed expanse. The process through which this matter coalesced into galaxies has long been shrouded in mystery. However, recent advancements in simulations have provided scientists with a clearer picture of the chaotic early Universe, filled with dust, nascent stars, and complex chemistry.
Findings indicate that the large galaxies observed by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) earlier in the Universe than previously anticipated can indeed form within the framework of our current cosmological models, provided the simulations incorporate additional details.
Astronomer Evgenii Chaikin from Leiden University in the Netherlands notes, “Some early JWST results were thought to challenge the standard cosmological model. Once key physical processes are represented more realistically, the model is consistent with what we see.”
Following the Big Bang, the Universe was a turbulent expanse of hot plasma that needed several hundred million years to cool and condense, forming the first stars and galaxies. Understanding this critical transformation is essential to comprehending the current state of the Universe. As this period remains unobservable directly, scientists depend on simulations to recreate the formation and evolution of the cosmos.
These simulations require immense computational power, often provided by supercomputers. To manage this, many are based on simplified physics models that aim to yield reliable outcomes. The COLIBRE cosmological simulation project endeavors to fill these gaps by including detailed models of gas, dust, and the dynamic outflows driven by stars and black holes to explore the early Universe’s evolution.
Astronomer Joop Schaye from Leiden University explains, “Much of the gas inside real galaxies is cold and dusty, but most previous large simulations had to ignore this. With COLIBRE, we finally bring these essential components into the picture.”
COLIBRE acts as a virtual miniature Universe, where scientists input parameters and let it evolve from pre-star birth to the present day. If the results mirror the current cosmos, the parameters are considered a reasonable approximation of historical processes. The most extensive simulations demanded 72 million CPU hours, yet the outcomes were worthwhile. The program was grounded in cold gas, known to be the source of star formation, and integrated the necessary physics and chemistry to make it functional.
The simulation also featured a dust model with grains in three types and two sizes. These small dust grains can significantly impact the Universe’s evolution by aiding atom coalescence into molecules and influencing radiation propagation by interacting with specific wavelengths.
Ultimately, researchers succeeded in creating a virtual Universe resembling our own. Physicist Carlos Frenk from Durham University in the UK remarks, “It is exhilarating to see ‘galaxies’ come out of our computer that look indistinguishable from the real thing and share many of the properties that astronomers measure in real data, such as their number, luminosities, colors, and sizes. What is most remarkable is that we are able to produce this synthetic Universe purely by solving the relevant equations of physics in the expanding Universe.”
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While COLIBRE has advanced simulations closer to reality, some mysteries remain unsolved. One significant enigma identified by JWST during the Cosmic Dawn is the Little Red Dots phenomenon. Theories have suggested they could be giant stars, massive black holes, or stars with black holes inside them. Despite these theories, they remain elusive, and COLIBRE has yet to provide a definitive explanation.
The Little Red Dots may become a focal point for future research. Currently, the results indicate progress in uncovering answers to one of the Universe’s most enigmatic eras.
The research has been published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

