The standard cosmological model is currently entangled in an unsustainable temporal tension. The James WebbSpace Telescope (JWST) has confirmed the existence of massive, hyper-luminous, and chemically maturestructures (known as "Little Red Dots") at an epoch corresponding to redshifts of z ≈ 5.0 - 9.0. Conventionalastrophysics is fundamentally unable to explain how galaxies with masses up to 1011 M⊙ or supermassive blackholes could fully develop a mere 500 million years after the Big Bang using the slow, traditional mechanisms ofbaryonic accretion and stochastic coalescence.The Adiabatic Geometric Leveling (AGL) Model elegantly resolves this chronological paradox by discardingthe assumption of linear, randomized growth. Instead, it demonstrates that the early universe underwent a UniformStandard Factory Phase dictated entirely by the underlying topography of the 4D Brane. In this initial cosmicepoch, the Bury Maturity Factor (ξ), which quantifies the degree of damping and filling via quantum bosonicnucleation against the gravitational scaffolding of dark matter, strictly tended to zero homogeneously across thecosmos:ξ(t) = 2ρa(r, t) / ρDM(r) → 0 (for t < 109 years)Without the presence of the quantum foam or cushioning provided by ultra-light long-range axions (LP Axions)to regularize and smooth the relief of spacetime, the invisible infrastructure of primordial dark matter —arranged ina non-homogeneous filamentary network with a neuron-style morphology that occupied 100% of the cosmicvolume— featured potential wells completely devoid of flat cores. Each node of this neural network constituted ametric cliff in the shape of a sharp, steep, and pointed peak (a cusp-type profile). Wherever one looks in thatdeep corridor of the past, spacetime was sown with these geometric pits turned on at maximum capacity, acting asthe geometric uterus or incubator for the future structures of the universe
ALBERTO MARIO ARIZA DE AVILA (Tue,) studied this question.
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