Twin Quasar was created in 1979.
No, a quasar is a distant celestial object that emits intense amounts of energy. While a quasar can release powerful radiation and energy into space, it cannot directly obliterate an entire planet in the way a weapon might. The impact of a quasar on a planet would depend on factors such as distance and the planet's atmosphere.
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 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.
A type of galaxy is probably the answer you are looking for. However, a quasar is actually an active galactic nucleus.
A quasar is basically a black hole and a black hole is caused by a point so dense that it rips spacetime. Since the density is so immense it therefore implies that the mass of the point is equally great since density = mass/volume. Thus, the point which causes a quasar is extremely heavy.
It is not.
a large redshift in the spectrum of the quasar.
Quasar Padamsee was born in 1978.
Twin Quasar was created in 1979.
it depends on how you're using it. quasar sounds correct if it's a thing
A binary quasar is a pair of quasars which gravitationally interact with each other, unlike a standard double quasar, which does not interact.
Quasi-stellar radio source.See related for information about a quasar
quasar, are you doing this for homework :D
Quasar - Wendell Vaughn - was created in 1978.
The diameter of a quasar is a few light-hours or a few light-days. A quasar consists of the immediate surroundings of a supermassive black hole.
The word quasar is short for quasi-stellar radio source.