13.3: Quasar-stellar Objects
- Page ID
- 244365
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Most QSOs are found at the edge of the observable Universe; representing the Universe in the distant past. They exhibit the highest-observable red shifts and the most distant of objects currently observable. A recently discovered (2010) Quasar was seen at 13.3 billion light-years distant. This is considered to be near the limit of the observable Universe. Quasars were most likely formed through early galactic collisions. These collisions formed the super-massive black holes at the centers of Quasars.
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