Well magnetar is a star with a Strong magnetic field so i say it could pretty much pull something off Earth if it came close from One quadrillion miles (1,000,000,000,000,000 miles) away.
In all likelihood you wouldn't be around to read the answer. Magnetars produce an amazing amount of X and gamma rays, that our Earths atmosphere wouldn't be able to deflect. So we would all be dead.
Considering the other oddity's in the Universe; Neutron stars, pulsars, Wolf Rayet stars, magnetar or even hypernovas, I don't think black holes are that odd.
No, not all strong electrolytes are strong acids. Strong electrolytes include strong acids, strong bases, and soluble salts. Strong acids are a subset of strong electrolytes that fully dissociate into ions when dissolved in water, leading to a high concentration of ions in solution.
Potassium nitrate is a strong electrolyte.
Strong
Magnetar Capital was created in 2005.
The theory regarding Magnetar was first proposed by Robert Duncan and Christopher Thompson in 1992.
A magnetar is a type of neutron star with an extremely strong magnetic field, while a black hole is a region of spacetime where gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape. Magnetars are made of dense neutron-rich material, while black holes are formed from the collapse of massive stars.
It is called a magnetar
As far as I know, in a magnetar, which is a special type of neutron star.
A magnetar is a neutron star with an extremely powerful magnetic field, the decay of which powers the emission of copious amounts of high-energy electromagnetic radiation, particularly X-rays and gamma-rays. The theory regarding these objects was formulated by Robert Duncan and Christopher Thompson in 1992, but the first recorded burst of gamma rays thought to have been from a magnetar was on March 5, 1979. During the following decade, the magnetar hypothesis has become widely accepted as a likely explanation for soft gamma repeaters and anomalous X-ray pulsars. To make this answer simple the Earth's magnetic field is roughly 1 gauss a typical neutron star is upwards of 1000 gauss and a magnetar is 1000x more powerful
In all likelihood you wouldn't be around to read the answer. Magnetars produce an amazing amount of X and gamma rays, that our Earths atmosphere wouldn't be able to deflect. So we would all be dead.
Considering the other oddity's in the Universe; Neutron stars, pulsars, Wolf Rayet stars, magnetar or even hypernovas, I don't think black holes are that odd.
The strongest known magnets are called magnetars, a sub-type of a neutron stars. If a human would approach such a magnetar within a thousand kilometers, the strong magnetic field would kill him.
Really strong, man. Really strong.
very, very strong. wiked strong wiked strong
mdf is strong but not very strong