Stuart Talbott: Gamma-Ray Burst Behaves Like No Other | Thunderbolts

The Gamma-Ray Burst (GRB) is the most energetic electromagnetic phenomenon known to science. A so-called long duration GRB only lasts about two-seconds and is thought to occur due to the core collapse of a black hole during a supernova which then forms astrophysical jets that emit gamma rays. No kidding.

Scientists have recently observed a GRB which gravitational theory simply cannot explain. Named GRB 250702B, it was recorded on July 2nd, 2025, and is the longest of its kind ever observed, lasting about a day.

Moreover, it did something astronomers have never seen a GRB do before—it appears to have repeated. It’s like no other GRB in fifty-years of observations since they’re expected to go off only once as the force that creates them can’t survive the explosion.

Independent researcher Stuart Talbott examines how the unprecedented behavior of this GRB can expose Standard Model misinterpretation. The crisis in cosmology continues.