Abstract The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has delivered observations that challenge fundamental assumptions of standard cosmology: the Hubble tension persists at high precision, "impossibly massive" black holes exist in the early universe, and galaxies appear "too mature too early." These findings are widely described as a "crisis" for Lambda-CDM cosmology. We propose that this crisis is not a crisis at all—it is the expected signature of Hyperbrane Relativity (HBR). In HBR, what we interpret as "early universe" observations are actually observations across a W-axis depth gradient, where scale integration effects systematically distort our inferences about cosmic history. This paper analyzes four key JWST discoveries through the HBR lens: (1) The Hubble tension as evidence for depth-dependent effective light speed (2) Early massive black holes as a misinterpretation of W-depth as cosmic time (3) Mature high-redshift galaxies as scale-compressed structures (4) Anomalous CMB-derived parameters as bulk geometry signatures We show that observations described as "impossible" or "too early" in standard cosmology become natural and expected when the W-axis dimension is properly accounted for. JWST is not revealing a crisis—it is providing the first direct evidence that our universe has geometric depth beyond the standard 3+1 dimensions.
Yuichi Yamamoto (Fri,) studied this question.