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 type of galaxy is probably the answer you are looking for. However, a quasar is actually an active galactic nucleus.
Einstein's cross is located about 8 billion light-years away from Earth. It is a gravitational lensing phenomenon where the light from a distant quasar is bent by the gravitational field of a foreground galaxy, creating multiple images of the quasar.
Quasars can vary in size, but on average they have a diameter of about 1 light-year.
Quasar formations are associated with supermassive black holes at the centers of galaxies. They emit powerful radiation as matter falls into them, creating a bright light that can be observed across vast distances in the universe.
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.
i have a rca remote without any light, have a quasar tv, how do i make this work?
Quasar
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.
It is not.
A type of galaxy is probably the answer you are looking for. However, a quasar is actually an active galactic nucleus.
Einstein's cross is located about 8 billion light-years away from Earth. It is a gravitational lensing phenomenon where the light from a distant quasar is bent by the gravitational field of a foreground galaxy, creating multiple images of the quasar.
10 billion light years was the distance. And we believe it was a quasar.
Quasars can vary in size, but on average they have a diameter of about 1 light-year.
Quasar formations are associated with supermassive black holes at the centers of galaxies. They emit powerful radiation as matter falls into them, creating a bright light that can be observed across vast distances in the universe.
a large redshift in the spectrum of the quasar.
Quasar Padamsee was born in 1978.