The day-long, repeating GRB 250702BDE / EP250702a: A unique extragalactic transient
Andrew J. Levan, Antonio Martin-Carrillo, Tanmoy Laskar, Rob A.J. Eyles-Ferris, Albert Sneppen, Maria Edvige Ravasio, Jillian C. Rastinejad, Joe S. Bright, Francesco Carotenuto, Ashley A. Chrimes, Gregory Corcoran, Benjamin P. Gompertz, Peter G. Jonker, Gavin P. Lamb

TL;DR
This paper reports on a unique, repeating extragalactic gamma-ray burst with unusual prompt emission patterns, multi-wavelength counterparts, and potential periodicity, challenging existing models of GRB origins.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed observation of a repeating, multi-outburst gamma-ray burst with unusual timing and properties, proposing new possible progenitor scenarios.
Findings
Multiple prompt outbursts with a repeating pattern
Detection of an extremely red infrared counterpart
Host galaxy located at redshift z ~ 0.2
Abstract
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are singular outbursts of high-energy radiation with durations typically lasting from milliseconds to minutes and, in extreme cases, a few hours. They are attributed to the catastrophic outcomes of stellar-scale events and, as such, are not expected to recur. Here, we present observations of an exceptional GRB\,250702BDE which triggered the {\em Fermi} gamma-ray burst monitor on three occasions over several hours, and which was detected in soft X-rays by the \textit{Einstein Probe} a day before the -ray triggers (EP250702a). We present the discovery of an extremely red infrared counterpart of the event with the VLT, as well as radio observations from MeerKAT. Hubble Space Telescope observations pinpoint the source to a non-nuclear location in a host galaxy with complex morphology, implying GRB 250702BDE is an extragalactic event. The multi-wavelength…
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