Quite easily.
If a planet were anywhere near a quasar source, it would not last very long.
Yes. Tsunamis can obliterate entire coastal communities.
Quasars are not planets because they are not spherical and do not orbit a star. A quasar is a supermassive black hole in the process of consuming large amounts of matter.
No. Life cannot exist anywhere near a quasar. For one thing there is no "on" a quasar. A quasar consists of a disk of extremely hot matter falling into a supermassive black hole. What cannot cross the event horizon is ejected in jets at the poles at nearly the speed of light. The radiation of even a moderate quasar is more than 10 trillion times that of the sun. Even light years away any planet would be completely sterilized.
A supernova explosion releases greatly more energy than our Sun in its entire lifetime.
Twin Quasar was created in 1979.
Quite a bit more than that. A typical quasar is several times brighter than an entire galaxy that has no quasar.Quite a bit more than that. A typical quasar is several times brighter than an entire galaxy that has no quasar.Quite a bit more than that. A typical quasar is several times brighter than an entire galaxy that has no quasar.Quite a bit more than that. A typical quasar is several times brighter than an entire galaxy that has no quasar.
Yes. Tsunamis can obliterate entire coastal communities.
Quasars are not planets because they are not spherical and do not orbit a star. A quasar is a supermassive black hole in the process of consuming large amounts of matter.
We would already have noticed - or been killed. A quasar emits more energy than an entire (present-day) galaxy.We would already have noticed - or been killed. A quasar emits more energy than an entire (present-day) galaxy.We would already have noticed - or been killed. A quasar emits more energy than an entire (present-day) galaxy.We would already have noticed - or been killed. A quasar emits more energy than an entire (present-day) galaxy.
Obliterate-To destroy
It depends, Black holes can go from being microscopic to supermassive black holes that entire galaxies revolve around. It all depends on which black hole and which quasar.
No. Life cannot exist anywhere near a quasar. For one thing there is no "on" a quasar. A quasar consists of a disk of extremely hot matter falling into a supermassive black hole. What cannot cross the event horizon is ejected in jets at the poles at nearly the speed of light. The radiation of even a moderate quasar is more than 10 trillion times that of the sun. Even light years away any planet would be completely sterilized.
Obliterate was created in 1992.
It is not.
It is used as a verb, such as "I will obliterate you!"
The teacher had to obliterate the rubbish work
Here is sentence with the word obliterate, "He needs to obliterate his childhood memories so as to enjoy life." Obliterate means to wipe out completely or destroy.