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Luminous cosmic objects
Answer for the clue "Luminous cosmic objects ", 7 letters:
quasars
Alternative clues for the word quasars
Usage examples of quasars.
He visited Earth and met the australopithecines, he helped chart gas clouds and quasars, he ferried crews to outposts and construction projects.
Pulsars and quasars, both brilliant beacons glimpsed across the cosmos, had proved to be powered by small specks of compressed mass, resolved only decades after their emissions made them obvious.
There were clusters of freckles on her forearms and wrists, an entire Milky Way spreading across her forehead, even a few sputtering quasars flung into the wormholes of her ears.
They had cobbled together ideas from the study of pulsars and quasars and their story fit together reasonably well.
Because we have alternative explanations of the properties of quasars that are consistent with known physical laws and that do not invoke alien life.
We detect the light from distant quasars only because the laws of electromagnetism are the same ten billion light years away as here.
The spectra of those quasars are recognizable only because the same chemical elements are present there as here, and because the same laws of quantum mechanics apply.
Hawking at Cambridge asks awesome questions about quasars, pulsars and black holes, and I believe we must rethink all our basic concepts.
More important to the present day, quasars and black holes did exist and they commanded the mind to explain them.
The outward circles from Earth, each of which must be explored, are the Moon, the planets, our Galaxy, the other galaxies, the quasars and black holes of recent definition, and anything that lies beyond.
It does not obey the physical laws of black holes, quasars, wormholes, or any known phenomenon.
But there was a very much larger number of quasars, for example, in the distant past.
If most quasars, as indicated by their extreme redshifts, were more than nine or ten billion light-years away in distance, then they also must be nine or ten billion years away in time, and therefore must belong to a past era of the universe.
This, for example, would explain quasars as part of the evolution of newly formed galaxies when the geometry of a smaller universe facilitated an exchange of matter between the various domains of eleven-dimensional space-time.