The Hubble Tension Is Not a Crisis — It's a Clue: What JWST's 'Impossible' Galaxies Reveal About the Universe's Assembly Code
The Hubble Tension Is Not a Crisis — It's a Clue: What JWST's 'Impossible' Galaxies Reveal About the Universe's Assembly Code The James Webb Space Telescope has, over the past three years, become the most productive source of cosmological anomaly in the history of observational astronomy. Not because it is broken. Because it is working exactly as intended — and what it is finding does not fit. As of January 2026, the data from JWST has pushed the Hubble Tension — the discrepancy between the universe's measured expansion rate and the rate predicted by standard cosmological models — past the 5-sigma threshold. In physics, 5σ is the line between "interesting anomaly" and "the model is wrong." The standard model of cosmology (ΛCDM) has now crossed that line. The institutions are in crisis mode. The community is arguing about whether the problem lies in early-universe physics, measurement methodology, or the cosmological constant itself. Papers ar...