In the standard picture, the first stars formed in regions dominated by dark matter, at the centers of dark matter microhalos, a few hundred million years after the Big Bang. At that time, molecular clouds of hydrogen and helium cooled enough to collapse under gravity, initiating the cosmic dawn era and creating conditions in which stars powered by dark matter annihilation, known as dark stars, could form and grow.
These dark stars are predicted to reach supermassive sizes and act as natural seeds for supermassive black holes. Earlier theoretical work has shown that such objects can provide the initial black hole masses needed to build up to the supermassive black holes seen at later times.
JWST observations have uncovered some of the most distant galaxies yet detected, and several of these systems conflict with pre-JWST models of early star and galaxy formation. Many of the most remote galaxies now fall into a category termed blue monsters, which are extremely bright, very compact, and nearly dust-free, properties that earlier simulations and theoretical models did not anticipate for galaxies at such early epochs.
In addition, JWST data intensify the long-standing problem of how to generate seeds for supermassive black holes that appear more massive than expected in the young universe. The telescope has also identified a new class of sources dubbed little red dots: compact, dustless objects at cosmic dawn that emit little or no X-ray radiation, contrary to expectations for actively accreting black holes.
Taken together, these three observational trends suggest that widely used pre-JWST scenarios for the birth of the first galaxies and the earliest supermassive black holes need substantial refinement. "Some of the most significant mysteries posed by the JWST's cosmic dawn data are in fact features of the dark star theory," Ilie said.
Although dark stars have not yet been confirmed, the new paper adds to an emerging set of clues by combining earlier photometric and spectroscopic dark star candidates reported in separate Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences studies in 2023 and 2025. The authors examine in detail how dark stars could reproduce the properties of blue monsters, little red dots, and galaxies hosting overmassive black holes, and present updated spectroscopic results.
Their analysis identifies possible dark star smoking-gun absorption features produced by helium in the spectrum of the high-redshift source JADES-GS-13-0, extending similar evidence previously reported for JADES-GS-14-0. These helium signatures, if confirmed, would support the presence of very massive, dark matter - powered stellar objects rather than only conventional stars in the earliest observable galaxies.
Because dark stars depend directly on the properties of the dark matter particle, confirming their existence would have consequences for both astrophysics and particle physics. Measuring dark star characteristics through JWST and related observations could help constrain dark matter models and complement laboratory efforts that seek dark matter via direct detection experiments or particle production.
The study emphasizes that dark stars remain hypothetical, but the combination of photometric and spectroscopic indicators emerging from JWST-era data makes them an increasingly testable idea. Future JWST programs and other high-redshift surveys will be needed to determine whether dark stars are present and whether they can fully account for blue monsters, little red dots, and early overmassive black hole hosts in the high-redshift universe.
Research Report:Supermassive Dark Stars and Their Remnants as a Possible Solution to Three Recent Cosmic Dawn Puzzles
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