Stuart Talbott: Electric Starbirth Seen Clearly | Thunderbolts

Of all the astronomical processes observed in nature, the most emphatic evidence in favor of plasma cosmology and the EU Model is star formation.

In August 2025, the journal Science Advances published “Massive extended streamers feed high-mass young stars.” This peer-reviewed paper explores the critical role of said streamers—(a new pet name for Birkeland currents?)—in the formation of a high mass star.

The discovery is recounted using concepts of mechanical winds, gas kinematics, infalling gas, shocked gas—then summarized by lead author Fernando A. Olguin describing “…massive gas highways”. Unsurprisingly, the word “Birkeland” never appears—and incredibly, the word “plasma” doesn’t show up either. However, “streamers” makes the cut in this 10-page paper thirty-three times.

It’s a truly fundamental problem that conventional astronomers—who aren’t professionally required to understand plasma physics and the principles of electricity—are unable to recognize the signature of a Birkeland current when it’s clearly self-evident.

Independent researcher Stuart Talbott continues to point out stars form like pearls on a cosmic string, and shares his favorite truism uttered by Wal Thornhill…“Nature doesn’t do things the hard way.”