ERIK MARTIN WILLÈN
Author of science fiction
Thursday, January 22, 2026
Cold neutral gas in early universe prompts rethink of galaxy cluster evolution - Astronomy & Space - Astronomy - UNIVERSE
Spatial and redshift distribution of the galaxy proto-cluster members and the background galaxies with strong DLAs. Credit: Nature Astronomy (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41550-025-02745-x
A
small group of young researchers at the Cosmic Dawn Center, Niels Bohr
Institute, University of Copenhagen, have, through observations of the early
stages of an extremely large galaxy cluster's evolution, shown that the largest
structures we know have a different history than previously thought.
The researchers began by observing a
very high density of cold, neutral
hydrogen gas—much
greater than expected—which is still actively forming stars and galaxies within
the cluster.
"This is not something we've seen
before in these systems, nor this far back in the universe's history. The
structure of the galaxy cluster we observed is unusual—it's massive; there is
an enormous amount of material in it, and we expect that it would evolve into
one of the largest galaxy clusters we've ever seen if we continued its
development to the present day," explains Kasper Heintz, Assistant
Professor at the Cosmic Dawn Center, Niels Bohr Institute and first author of
the study.
"In itself it was a bit mysterious
that the galaxy cluster was so large, but that might make sense given that we
found this huge amount of cold, neutral gas falling into the structure and
'feeding' the formation of galaxies."
The video is a simulation showing the formation
of galaxies within the large overdensities of the "cosmic web," which
consists of cold, neutral hydrogen gas. The hydrogen gas serves as the material
for the formation of these systems. Gyr = billion years. Credit: Video: Heintz
et. al 2026
The amount of cold neutral gas didn't match previous assumptions
One thing that puzzled the
researchers was that the observations of this large amount of neutral hydrogen
gas didn't really fit with the existing models for the universe's evolution.
It was previously assumed that
about one billion years after the Big Bang, galaxy clusters would shine so
brightly that the gas would have been ionized by the light or radiation—meaning
the gas had transformed from its original primordial state and was no longer
neutral.
But the amount of cold, neutral
hydrogen gas contradicted this assumption. What researchers believed was the
driving effect of the last phase transition in the universe's evolution—namely
the ionization of primordial matter in the process called "large-scale
ionization of the universe"—was challenged by the large amounts of
non-ionized gas.
Previous assumptions held that
ionization was driven by "pockets" of luminous galaxy clusters. But
there is a much larger proportion of cold, neutral hydrogen gas remaining than
models predicted at this point in the universe's history.
Many more similar galaxy structures have been found
Researchers will now investigate
this question by observing other galaxy clusters. Master's student Chamilla
Terp is using her thesis project to observe several different types of galaxy
clusters with the James Webb Space
Telescope (JWST).
Chamilla discovered the first
overdensity of cold, neutral gas through the studies she conducted in her
bachelor project, so the natural progression is for her to continue these
investigations.
Not only that—she also succeeded
in developing a method that made it possible to separate observations
of the gas belonging to the galaxies under study from the gas lying "in
front" of them—in the enormous space along the line of sight from the
James Webb telescope. This allowed for much more precise observation of the
evolution of individual galaxy clusters—a crucial methodological breakthrough.
And already, more of these types of
structures have appeared than researchers expected, even when looking
"deep" into the universe, as JWST does—in a small field of view.
Looking deep and far into the universe also means looking far back in time, so
we can observe early developmental stages—such as galaxy clusters.
This raises yet another question: Why do we see the early birth of numerous very large structures in the universe, but today we don't actually see those structures? So where did they go? Why did they disappear along the way in the universe's developmental history?
Provided by University of
Copenhagen
edited by Gaby Clark, reviewed by Robert Egan
Source: Cold neutral gas in early universe prompts rethink of galaxy cluster evolution

