Astronomy Picture of the Day |
APOD: 2003 May 20 - A Primordial Quasar
Explanation:
What did the first quasars look like?
The nearest quasars are now known to be
supermassive black holes in the
centers of galaxies.
Gas and dust that falls toward a
quasar glows brightly,
sometimes outglowing the entire home galaxy.
The quasars that formed in the first billion years
of the universe are more mysterious, though,
with even the nature of the surrounding gas still unknown.
Above, an artist's impression shows a primordial quasar
as it might have been, surrounded by sheets of gas, dust, stars,
and early star clusters.
Exacting observations of three distant quasars now
indicate emission of very specific colors of the element
iron.
These Hubble Space Telescope
observations, which bolster
recent results from the
WMAP mission,
indicate that a whole complete cycle of stars was born,
created this iron, and died within the first
few hundred million years of the universe.
APOD: 2002 March 9 - A Quasar Portrait Gallery
Explanation:
Quasars
(QUASi-stellAR objects) lie near the edge of the observable
Universe.
Discovered in 1963,
astronomers
were astounded that such objects could be
visible across billions of light-years, as this implies
they must emit prodigious
amounts of energy.
Where does
the
energy come from?
Many believe the quasar's central engine is a giant black hole
fueled by tremendous amounts of infalling gas, dust, and stars.
This
gallery of quasar portraits from the Hubble Space
Telescope offers a look at their local neighborhoods: the quasars themselves
appear as the bright star-like objects with
diffraction spikes.
The
images in the center and right hand columns reveal quasars
associated with disrupted colliding and merging galaxies
which should provide
plenty
of debris to feed a hungry
black
hole.
APOD: 1999 December 26 - Gamma-Ray Quasar
Explanation:
The bright object in the center of the false color
image above is quasar 3C279
viewed in gamma-rays, photons with
more than 40 million times the energy of visible light.
Like all quasars, 3C279 is a nondescript, faint, star-like object in
the visible sky.
Yet, in June of 1991 a gamma-ray telescope onboard NASA's orbiting
Compton Gamma Ray Observatory unexpectedly
discovered that it was one of the
brightest objects in the gamma-ray sky.
Shortly after this image was recorded
the quasar faded from view at gamma-ray energies.
Astronomers are still trying to understand what causes these enigmatic
objects to flare so violently.
Another quasar, 3C273, is faintly
visible above and to the right of center.
Authors & editors:
Robert Nemiroff
(MTU) &
Jerry Bonnell
(USRA)
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Disclaimers
NASA Official: Jay Norris.
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A service of:
EUD at
NASA /
GSFC
& Michigan Tech. U.