The Day-long, Repeating #GRB 250702B - A Unique Extragalactic Transient: https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/2041-8213/adf8e1 -> Astronomers spot mysterious gamma-ray explosion, unlike any detected before: https://www.eso.org/public/news/eso2514/
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(Follow-Up to an earlier paper about #GRB250702B in the thread) Discovery of a #GammaRayBurst from a #BlackHole Falling into a Star: https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.22792 -> discussion https://scicomm.xyz/@johncarlosbaez@mathstodon.xyz/115371873692093048
GRB 250702B: Discovery of a Gamma-Ray Burst from a Black Hole Falling into a Star

Gamma-ray bursts are the most luminous electromagnetic events in the universe. Their prompt gamma-ray emission has typical durations between a fraction of a second and several minutes. A rare subset of these events have durations in excess of a thousand seconds, referred to as ultra-long gamma-ray bursts. Here, we report the discovery of the longest gamma-ray burst ever seen with a ~25,000 s gamma-ray duration, GRB 250702B, and characterize this event using data from four instruments in the InterPlanetary Network and the Monitor of All-sky X-ray Image. We find a hard spectrum, subsecond variability, and high total energy, which are only known to arise from ultrarelativistic jets powered by a rapidly-spinning stellar-mass central engine. These properties and the extreme duration are together incompatible with all confirmed gamma-ray burst progenitors and nearly all models in the literature. This burst is naturally explained with the helium merger model, where a field binary ends when a black hole falls into a stripped star and proceeds to consume and explode it from within. Under this paradigm, GRB 250702B adds to the growing evidence that helium stars expand and that some ultra-long GRBs have similar evolutionary pathways as collapsars, stellar-mass gravitational wave sources, and potentially rare types of supernovae.

arXiv.org