Odd Radio Circles (ORC) were first discovered in 2019, but they remain largely elusive as mainstream astrophysics stumble upon another plasma phenomenon they cannot explain. They are so massive that entire galaxies reside at their centers—spanning hundreds of thousands of light-years reaching 10 to 20 times the size of our Milky Way galaxy.
RAD J131346.9+500320 is a rare double-ringed ORC colossal formation, some 7.5 billion light years away. It’s visible only in radio frequencies and detected as two concentric rings surrounding a distant galaxy.
ORCs are thought to result from ancient outbursts driven by “supermassive black holes”—two perfect concentric rings like ripples frozen in time. However, the EU Model views an ORC as a plasma discharge event—a double layer collapsing, releasing energy in concentric circles. Not an accident of gravity, but the signature of electrical charge current flow.
Author and independent researcher David Drew ponders when a “new force” is found in the heavens it’s met by science with shock and awe—then conveniently placed in the gravitational or magnetic fields anomaly box—when it’s simply the same force that lights our homes, powers our cities, and crackles in every storm here on Earth.





