What is another word for quasar?

Pronunciation: [kwˈe͡ɪzɑː] (IPA)

Quasars are extremely luminous and distant celestial objects that are powered by supermassive black holes at the centers of galaxies. Synonyms for quasar include quasi-stellar object (QSO), quasi-stellar radio source (QSRS), and quasi-stellar X-ray source (QSX). These terms were coined in the mid-1960s when quasars were first discovered and were thought to be stars but with unusual spectra. However, it was later discovered that quasars are actually galaxies with massive black holes at their centers, and their powerful radiation and high-energy emissions make them distinct from other types of astronomical objects. Despite this, the term "quasar" has remained the most commonly used name for these fascinating and enigmatic cosmic phenomena.

What are the hypernyms for Quasar?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.
  • Other hypernyms:

    radio source, active galactic nucleus, cosmic object, extragalactic object, stellar object.

What are the hyponyms for Quasar?

Hyponyms are more specific words categorized under a broader term, known as a hypernym.

Famous quotes with Quasar

  • One of the curious features of modern physics is that in spite of its overwhelming success in explaining a vast range of of physical phenomena from quark to quasar, it fails to give us a single metaphor for how the universe really works.
    Nick Herbert (physicist)
  • The male sense of space must differ from that of the female, who has such interesting, active, and significant inner space. The space that interests men is outer. The fly ball high against the sky, the long pass spiraling overhead, the jet fighter like a scarcely visible pinpoint nozzle laying down its vapor trail at 40,000 feet, the gazelle haunch flickering just beyond arrow-reach, the uncountable stars sprinkled on their great black wheel, the horizon, the mountaintop, the quasar — these bring portents with them and awaken a sense of relation with the invisible, with the empty. The ideal male body is taut with lines of potential force, a diagram extending outward; the ideal female body curves around centers of repose.
    John Updike

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