Abstract
The enigmatic ultraviolet (UV) extinction bump at 2175 $\, {\rm \mathring{\rm A}}$, the strongest spectroscopic absorption feature superimposed on the interstellar extinction curve, has recently been detected at the cosmic dawn by the JWST in JADES-GS-z6-0, a distant galaxy at redshift $z\approx 6.71$, corresponding to a cosmic age of just 800 million years after the big bang. Although small graphite grains have historically long been suggested as the carrier of the 2175 $\, {\rm \mathring{\rm A}}$ extinction bump and graphite grains are expected to have already been pervasive in the early Universe, in this work we demonstrate that small graphite grains are not responsible for the UV extinction bump seen at the cosmic dawn in JADES-GS-z6-0, as the extinction bump arising from small graphite grains is too broad and peaks at wavelengths that are too short to be consistent with what is seen in JADES-GS-z6-0.