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.
Twin Quasar was created in 1979.
A type of galaxy is probably the answer you are looking for. However, a quasar is actually an active galactic nucleus.
Quasar formation is associated with the big bang. The big bang is the model of how the universe was formed.
Not "the" quasar, but "a" quasar - there are many. A quasar is associated with a supermassive black hole, and those are generally at the center of galaxies.
Quite easily. If a planet were anywhere near a quasar source, it would not last very long.
No, it's a possible stage in the life cycle of a star.
It is not.
Immeasurably more brilliant. A quasar (quasi-stellar radio source) is as bright as some entire GALAXIES. We believe that a quasar is an actively-expanding super-massive black hole, and that these black holes may exist in the centers of many or most large galaxies - including our own Milky Way.
For one, a black hole can hardly be observed directly (the Hawking radiation is expected to exist, but it would be way too weak). A quasar (related to material falling into the black hole) is one way the black hole can be observed.Also, the quasar can play quite an active role in the formation of a galaxy.
Quasar Padamsee was born in 1978.
Astronomers have detected a quasar in a distant galaxy.
Twin Quasar was created in 1979.
a large redshift in the spectrum of the quasar.
A binary quasar is a pair of quasars which gravitationally interact with each other, unlike a standard double quasar, which does not interact.
Quasar - Wendell Vaughn - was created in 1978.
Quasi-stellar radio source.See related for information about a quasar
quasar, are you doing this for homework :D