What is Quasar: Definition and 61 Discussions

A quasar (; also known as a quasi-stellar object, abbreviated QSO) is an extremely luminous active galactic nucleus (AGN), in which a supermassive black hole with mass ranging from millions to billions of times the mass of the Sun is surrounded by a gaseous accretion disk. As gas in the disk falls towards the black hole, energy is released in the form of electromagnetic radiation, which can be observed across the electromagnetic spectrum. The power radiated by quasars is enormous; the most powerful quasars have luminosities thousands of times greater than a galaxy such as the Milky Way. Usually, quasars are categorized as a subclass of the more general category of AGN. The redshifts of quasars are of cosmological origin.The term quasar originated as a contraction of quasi-stellar [star-like] radio source – because quasars were first identified during the 1950s as sources of radio-wave emission of unknown physical origin – and when identified in photographic images at visible wavelengths, they resembled faint, star-like points of light. High-resolution images of quasars, particularly from the Hubble Space Telescope, have demonstrated that quasars occur in the centers of galaxies, and that some host galaxies are strongly interacting or merging galaxies. As with other categories of AGN, the observed properties of a quasar depend on many factors, including the mass of the black hole, the rate of gas accretion, the orientation of the accretion disk relative to the observer, the presence or absence of a jet, and the degree of obscuration by gas and dust within the host galaxy.
Quasars are found over a very broad range of distances, and quasar discovery surveys have demonstrated that quasar activity was more common in the distant past. The peak epoch of quasar activity was approximately 10 billion years ago.More than a million quasars have been found. The nearest known quasar is about 600 million light-years away (Markarian 231).
The record for the most distant known quasar keeps changing. In 2017, the quasar ULAS J1342+0928 was detected at redshift z = 7.54. Light observed from this 800 million solar mass quasar was emitted when the universe was only 690 million years old. In 2020, the quasar Pōniuāʻena was detected from a time only 700 million years after the Big Bang, and with an estimated mass of 1.5 billion times the mass of our Sun. In early 2021, the quasar J0313-1806, with a 1.6 billion solar-mass black hole, was reported at z = 7.64, 670 million years after the Big Bang. In March 2021, PSO J172.3556+18.7734 was detected and has since been called the most distant known radio-loud quasar discovered.

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  1. turbo

    Could Quasars Be Ejection Events Instead of Collisions?

    The post that held the link to this paper has been moved. I would like to see comments on this paper, including impressions of the mechanism responsible for the interaction of the quasar and the associated galaxy. http://arxiv.org/ftp/astro-ph/papers/0509/0509433.pdf I objected to the...
  2. CarlB

    Alignment of Quasar Polarizations 0507274

    Mapping extreme-scale alignments of quasar polarization vectors Accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysics; 19 pages, 17 figures. Include Table A1 which will be available via CDS D. Hutsemekers, R. Cabanac, H. Lamy, D. Sluse Based on a new sample of 355 quasars with significant optical...
  3. Garth

    An Old quasar in a Young Universe?

    An Old quasar in a Young Universe? On the arXiv today:Age of High Redshift Objects - a Litmus Test for the Dark Energy Models The Abstract: (Italics mine) Just for the record, in the SCC scenario, in the Einstein conformal frame with constant atomic proper masses, the age of the universe at z...
  4. turbo

    Polarization of quasar emissions

    http://xxx.lanl.gov/PS_cache/astro-ph/pdf/0507/0507274.pdf If quasars are at the cosmological distances suggested by their redshifts, can they conspire to be polarized similarly with respect to their line-of-sight angle to the Earth? If the universe is homogeneous and isotropic, these...
  5. SpaceTiger

    Exploring Quasar Absorption Lines: Power Spectrum, Metallicity, and More

    Nereid brought up the subject of quasar absorption lines in the "Dark Matter" post. I worked on the subject as an undergrad, so I would be happy to answer any questions you have about it. Some examples of things it tells us are 1) The power spectrum of matter in the universe (small scales)...
  6. turbo

    Lensed Quasar Pair: Retaining Point-like Appearance

    "lensed" quasar pair Here is a paper about a purportedly lensed quasar. http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/astro-ph/0505248 Has anybody notice how "lensed" quasars, like those comprising the Einstein cross, seem to manage to retain their point-like appearance instead of exhibiting arc-like...
  7. W

    No big bang, white whole quasar

    Why does there have to be a big bang, why couldn't we (the universe) begun from another universe's black whole and pure energy flowed from a quasar, or white hole, from reading about quasars they are dumping millions of times the energy into the universe than galaxies that we view that is...
  8. Aquafire

    Dark Age: Galaxy & Quasar Formation ?

    This is my first post, so I am going to get straight into a double barreled question that has been bugging me for a while. (1) How long does it take for stars to conglomerate around a general loci, in order to form a proto-galaxy. ? I ask this in the light of the most recent Hubble images...
  9. Z

    The energy and the faster-than-light motion of the quasar

    The spacetime of the foggoid (for information about foggoid, please see Chapter 6 of the Antigravitation Engine Site) is curved; therefore the foggoid has gravitation. Due to the nature of "whole or none" of antigravitation, the curvature of foggoid is unstable; hence the gravitation of...
  10. N

    Lensed quasar observations support dark matter models

    SDSS observations, supported by Subaru and Keck, confirmed that a massive cluster of galaxies is the gravitational lens for a quadruple-quasar image, the widest pair being separated by >14" (arc seconds). In addition, "[d]iscovering one such wide gravitational lens out of over 30,000 SDSS...
  11. J

    Quasar Enigmas In 'decresing Light Speed' Cosmolog

    One of the main problems of quasars is: How can an energy equivalent to 100 times that of a normal galaxy, be produced continuously in a region smaller than the Solar System? To solve this puzzle, it was suggested that quasars were not at cosmological distances, but much closer, even within...
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