Several discrepancies between the predictions of cold dark matter in the ΛCDM model and observations of galaxies and their clustering have arisen. Some of these problems have proposed solutions, but it remains unclear whether they can be solved without abandoning the ΛCDM model.
Cuspy halo problem The density distributions of dark matter halos in cold dark matter simulations (at least those that do not include the impact of baryonic feedback) are much more peaked than what is observed in galaxies by investigating their rotation curves.
Dwarf galaxy problem Cold dark matter simulations predict large numbers of small clumps in dark matter halos, consequently many
dwarf galaxies clustered around
spiral and
elliptical galaxies – more numerous than the number of small dwarf galaxies that are observed around large galaxies like the
Milky Way.
Satellite disk problem Dwarf galaxies around the
Milky Way and
Andromeda galaxies are observed to be orbiting in thin, planar structures whereas the simulations predict that they should be distributed randomly, in a roughly
spherical halos about their parent galaxies, similar to the orbits observed for
globular clusters.
High-velocity galaxy problem Galaxies in the
NGC 3109 association are moving away too rapidly to be consistent with expectations in the ΛCDM model. In this framework, NGC 3109 is too massive and distant from the
Local Group for it to have been flung out in a three-body interaction involving the
Milky Way or
Andromeda Galaxy.
Galaxy morphology problem If galaxies grew hierarchically, then massive galaxies required many mergers.
Major mergers inevitably create a classical
bulge. On the contrary, about 80% of observed galaxies give evidence of no such bulges, and giant pure-disc galaxies are commonplace. The tension can be quantified by comparing the observed distribution of galaxy shapes today with predictions from high-resolution hydrodynamical cosmological simulations in the ΛCDM framework, revealing a highly significant problem that is unlikely to be solved by improving the resolution of the simulations. The high bulgeless fraction was nearly constant for 8 billion years.
Fast galaxy bar problem If galaxies were embedded within massive halos of cold dark matter, then the bars that often develop in their central regions would be slowed down by
dynamical friction with the halo. This is in serious tension with the fact that observed galaxy bars are typically fast.
Small-scale crisis Comparison of the model with observations may have some problems on sub-galaxy scales, possibly predicting
too many dwarf galaxies and too much dark matter in the innermost regions of galaxies. This problem is called the "small scale crisis". These small scales are harder to resolve in computer simulations, so it is not yet clear whether the problem is the simulations, non-standard properties of dark matter, or a more radical error in the model.
High redshift galaxies Observations from the
James Webb Space Telescope have resulted in various galaxies confirmed by
spectroscopy at high redshift, such as
JADES-GS-z13-0 at
cosmological redshift of 13.2 or
JADES-GS-z14-0 at
cosmological redshift of 14.32. Such a high rate of large galaxy formation in the early universe appears to contradict the rates of galaxy formation allowed in the existing Lambda CDM model via dark matter halos, as even if galaxy formation were 100% efficient and all mass were allowed to turn into stars in Lambda CDM, it wouldn't be enough to create such large galaxies. However, this depends upon assuming a stellar
initial mass function. If early star formation favored massive stars, this could explain the tension. == See also ==