No, not in the slightest sense.
A quasar, pulsar, and galaxy are three very different things.
No. A Quasar is a Black hole in center of some Galaxies. I think our Galaxy has one of them.
Astronomers have detected a quasar in a distant galaxy.
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.
Depends on how you look at "power" I suppose, but a quasar is similar to a pulsar in that it has high enough angular velocity to produce jets of EM and synchrotron radiation through it's poles but however, a quasar is orders of magnitude larger than a pulsar since a pulsar is just a single neutron star (Maybe 20-30km in diameter) while the quasar is a entire galactic nuclei.
That would be called a "pulsar". See related question
quasar
A quasar evolves into a galaxy as it exhausts its fuel supply of supermassive black holes at its core. Once the black hole stops accreting matter and emitting large amounts of energy, the quasar phase ends, and it becomes a mature galaxy.
quasar
A quasar will have the brightest galactic centre.
Pulsar Quasar Radial(?) These are all names for some variety of "star"
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.
A type of galaxy is probably the answer you are looking for. However, a quasar is actually an active galactic nucleus.