Quasars or quasi-stellar radio sources are the most energetic and distant members of a class of objects called active galactic nuclei (AGN). Quasars are extremely luminous and were first identified as being high redshift sources of electromagnetic energy, including radio waves and visible light, that appeared to be similar to stars, rather than extended sources similar to galaxies. They cannot escape a black hole. Only Hawking Radiation can escape a black hole.
No, a superheated quasar cannot escape a black hole. Quasars are extremely bright and energetic sources powered by accretion onto supermassive black holes, and their emissions arise from the material falling into the black hole. Once matter crosses the event horizon – the point of no return – it cannot escape the black hole, including the energy emitted by the quasar.
Twin Quasar was created in 1979.
Super heated to remove excessive moisture
A quasar forms when huge amounts of matter fall into a supermassive black hole. As the matter gets close it is heated to temperatures so hot that atoms fall apart and emits intense radiation. What doesn't crosss the event horizon is ejected in jets at the black hole's poles at nearly the speed of light.
No, unless is is super-heated.
The Question, Quasar.
No, a superheated quasar cannot escape a black hole. Quasars are extremely bright and energetic sources powered by accretion onto supermassive black holes, and their emissions arise from the material falling into the black hole. Once matter crosses the event horizon – the point of no return – it cannot escape the black hole, including the energy emitted by the quasar.
Yes, a quasar is a galaxy with a super-massive black hole in its center. The hole being invisible, all light vanishing from the great gravity. The quasar itself, among the brightest, most luminous objects in the universe, is being powered by an accretion disc around the black hole.
A quasar is a lot like a black hole, in that it was once a star. There are many spikes that do project from the center of the quasar. These are optical spikes. they are like a glare that the telescopes see when they look at a star. if you look at the sun off of a mirror, you can see the same optical spikes from the sun. It is basically a You can also see another line that extends from both sides of the quasar. These lines that you see are actually super heated gas that has been shot out from the center of the quasar. These streams extend many light-years away from the quasar. If you want to learn more, look at some of the Hubble pictures of quasars.
A blazar is a compact quasar, associated with a super-massive black hole at the centre of an active galaxy.
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.
Freaking epic
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