About site: Astronomy/Galaxies/Active Galactic Nuclei - Quasars - Laser Stars - Quasars
Return to Science also Science
  About site: http://laserstars.org/glossary/quasar.html

Title: Astronomy/Galaxies/Active Galactic Nuclei - Quasars - Laser Stars - Quasars Quasars are not black holes, they are laser stars within our galaxy.
When_Did_the_First_Cosmic_Structure_Form? Contains press release about the impact of quasars within various galaxies. Includes photos. (November 19, 1996)

Acoustic_material_property_tables Specialty Engineering Associates

ISO_9613 attenuation of sound during propagation outdoors.

Seawater_Sound_Speed_Calculator by Simon Richards.

Velocity_of_sound_in_some_Biological_Material Ultrasound physics. Parameters. Differences between X-rays and ultrasound.( Gonzalo Diaz M. M.D.)

American_Chemical_Society_News_Service Latest news about chemistry meetings, journals, business, education, environment, food and agriculture, health and medicine, materials and technology.


  Alexa statistic for http://laserstars.org/glossary/quasar.html





Get your Google PageRank






Please visit: http://laserstars.org/glossary/quasar.html


  Related sites for http://laserstars.org/glossary/quasar.html
    Chemical_and_Engineering_News Weekly news magazine of the chemical world. Provide news and worldwide coverage in the scientific, technological, educational, business, and governmental aspects of chemistry.
    ChemNews Publishes software reviews and articles about applications of software in chemical research.
    Encyclopedia_of_Catalysis John Wiley and Sons, Publisher.
    HighThroughputExperimentation_com News, events, interviews, suppliers information and jobs related to high throughput experiments on catalysts and materials technology.
    Ullmann\'s_Encyclopedia_of_Industrial_Chemistry_Online The state-of-the-art reference work detailing the science and technology in all areas of industrial chemistry. Now online with nearly 1000 major articles, written by some 3,000 authors.
    Topix_net__Chemistry News about chemistry, collected from various sources on the web. [RSS]
    ABCml__Analysis_of_Bone_Counts_by_Maximum_Likelihood Software that implements a statistical method for analysis of bone counts from archaeological or paleontological sites. Java version of the software and documentation.
    Alaska_Consortium_of_Zooarchaeologists Volunteer organization dedicated to improving the comparative collection at the University of Alaska Anchorage. Offers workshops, presents papers, sponsors symposia, and produces publications.
    Ancient_Biomolecules_Centre University of Oxford research center in the Departments of Zoology and Biological Anthropology. Projects include research on Phylogenetics, Pathogens, and Beringian permafrost.
    Archaeofauna Publishes yearly papers of archaeozoological nature, in the widest sense of the term not just in the strictly biological one. Contains abstracts of all ten volumes produced to date.
    Archaeozoology_in_New_Zealand Contains detailed information on several current research projects in New Zealand.
    Archeozoo Collaborative content site organized around sections that can contain numerous articles and links.
    ArchNet__Faunal_Resources Links related to identification of animal remains.
    Bibliography_of_Foodways_and_Zooarchaeology_on_Historical_Sites Compiled by William Hampton Adams.
    Binghamton_University_Archaeological_Analytical_Research_Facility Specimens represent taxa from the Northeastern United States, and include examples from South America, West Africa, and the Arctic. Species list and contact information.
    Bioarchaeological_References A bibliography of papers on identifying and interpreting biological remains from archaeological sites in terms of human usage, biogeography, and paleoecology. Compiled by the Laboratory for Environmen
    BoneCommons Online community for zooarchaeology.
    Caerwent_Animal_Bone_Remains Kevin Smith's Dissertation on the faunal remains recovered from 4th century deposits in the Romano-British town of Caerwent.
    California_State_University_Chico_Zooarchaeology_Lab Skeletons of mammals, birds, and fish typical of Northern California and the Western Great Basin, where most of Chico State's archaeological research takes place. Detailed facility profile.
    Canadian_Zooarchaeology A forum for topics of interest to zooarchaeologists working in Canada, and abroad. Regular and special feature articles are complemented by a variety of listings and exchanges.
    Cetacean_Zooarchaeology_Research_Network Informal network of individuals whose research interests include cetacean remains in archaeological contexts.
    Colorado_State_University_Zooarchaeology Collection of pages related to L.C. Todd's zooarchaeology class. Includes information on coding animal bones and bison osteology.
    Computerised_Bone_Templates Presents an approach to the computerized recording of graphical zooarchaeological data using digital image templates and graphic software packages.
    Contribution_of_Archaeozoology_to_Landscape_Archaeology Paper whose principal argument is that information provided by animal bones about ancient landscapes is indirect but critical (RTF File).
    Domestication_Revisited__Its_Implications_for_Faunal_Analysis Abstract of a Journal of Field Archaeology paper by Howard Hecker.
    English_Heritage_Professional_Zooarchaeology_Group Aim is to facilitate the exchange of ideas between those within universities and those working within units or as freelancers.
    Ethnozoology_Index An exhibit in Minnesota State University's EMuseum with information on Egyptian, Roman, Mexican and Wisconsin ethnozoology with links.
    Faunal_analyses_from_HacImusalar_Höyük The purpose of this research is to analyze the faunal assemblage retrieved from the excavations at HacImusalar Höyük in Turkey to determine the spatial and/or temporal differences in that assemblage
    The_Fish_Bones_from_Orford,_Suffolk Report prepared by Mark Beech and Charlie Stokes for the Suffolk County Council Archaeological Service. Includes abstract and link to order full report.
    Florida_Museum_of_Natural_History_-_Zooarchaeology_Comparative_Collection Skeletons of vertebrates and exoskeletons of mollusks and crustaceans from the southeastern United States, the West Indies, the circum-Caribbean area, and northwestern South America. Collection databa
    Grahame_Clark_Laboratory_for_Zooarchaeology Profile of the laboratory at the University of Cambridge. Includes staff profiles and brief descriptions of research projects.
    ICAZ_Animal_Palaeopathology_Working_Group Palaeopathology forum and downloadable bibliography [DOC format].
    Indiana_University_Zooarchaeology_Laboratory Profile of this laboratory whose purpose is to accumulate skeletal remains of indigenous animal species to facilitate identification of faunal materials from Indiana and contiguous states.
    International_Council_for_Archaeozoology ICAZ is an international organization for those interested in studying the rich history of human/animal interactions through the analysis of archaeological animal bones.
    International_Journal_of_Osteoarchaeology Provides a forum for the publication of papers dealing with all aspects of the study of human and animal bones from archaeological contexts. Including coverage in the following key areas: palaeopathol
    Late_Prehistoric_Subsistence_in_Central_Indiana Report on the faunal remains from three prehistoric sites in Indiana by Rexford C. Garniewicz.
    LaVase_River_Faunal_Analysis Faunal analysis portion of the detailed report on the archaeological excavations at the mouth of the LaVase River on lake Nipissing, North Bay, Ontario, Canada.
    Marine_Turtle_Exploitation_in_Bronze_Age_Oman Paper by Christine Mosseri-Marlio, published in the Marine Turtle Newsletter.
    MSc_in_Zooarchaeology Overview of University of York graduate program.
    NABO__Zooarchaeology_Working_Group NABO is an interdisciplinary, international, non-governmental regional research cooperative that works to serv e scholars interested in the interactions of humans and changing landscapes across the No
This is sites2007.com cache of m/ as retrieved on 2008.12.02 sites2007.com's cache is the snapshot that we took of the page as we crawled the web. The page may have changed since that time.
Laser Stars - Quasars

QUASARS

In the early 1960's quasars were known as 'radio stars' because the method used to discover the first quasars was based on coincidences between a strong radio source and a point-like optical source. Since each radio source was associated with a star it was originally thought that quasars were objects within the galaxy hence the term 'radio stars'. Quasars or quasi-stellar radio source, from the method by which they where originally discovered : as stellar optical counterparts to small regions of strong radio emission. With increasing spatial resolution of radio telescopes the strong radio emission often seemed to come from a pair of lobes surrounding many of these faint star-like emission line objects. The method initial method of selection was strong radio emission, then later any object with blue or ultraviolet excess was considered a good quasar candidate. Very recent evidence from the near infrared portion of the spectrum indicates that a large fraction of quasars may in fact be brighter in the infrared than in other wavelength bands. Unfortunately, due to an error in spectral identification made by Maarten Schmidt (1963) these quasars were incorrectly classified as extra-galactic objects. In order to distance themselves from the term 'radio stars' they nicknamed these objects QUASARs for QUAsi StellAr Radio source (because the only 'appeared' like stars). The subsequent discovery of emission lines with little or no radio emission led to the modern term QSO (or Quasi Stellar Object), again partly because they could not bring themselves to consider them as stars within the galaxy. However, based on the extensive work of Y.P. Varshni it turns out quasars were stars after all; they are laser stars within the galaxy. Hence the similarities of the properties quasars such as Cygnus-A and 3C 345 with those of other objects within the galaxy like Eta Carinae, MWC 349, NGC 7027, SS433 and Young Stellar Objects (YSO). In fact their properties are so similar that two recent 'radio stars', GRS 1915-105 and GRO J1655-40 have been nicknamed 'mini-quasars' by their discoverers. Considering this large amount of accumulating data on lasers associated with confirmed radio stars within the galaxy, combined with The recent discovery of 'Naked quasars' only adds fuel to the fire; it is high time for the astronomical community to abandon the outdated and obsolete quasar redshift interpretation. A recent post from a quasar astronomer sci.astro responding in a newsgroup to concerns raised over the alarming similarities between the jets of the 'radio star' GRS 1915+105 and quasar jets: Some quasars show superluminal sources, but just because an object shows superluminal motion does not make it a quasar. In fact, I think this is a cataclysmic binary, so it has an accretion disk, like we think quasars do, but it is on a much smaller scale. This is a clearcut case of 'belief is stronger than reason'. He believes so strongly that quasars are are extragalactic he immediately eliminates the competition by claiming that it is ludicrous to compare quasars with other objects confirmed within the galaxy. This comparison is perfectly valid in a healthy scientific community commited to impartial examination of all the evidence, without any prior bias originating from a particular theoretical interpretation. Astrophysics will progress when astronomers not brainwashed by the redshift myth begin to open their eyes to this data. In other words he is claiming there are two physics involved here; (1) The physics of ordinary stars and (2) The unusual physics of quasars. This response is typical of staunch believers of a popular religion: They don't see any conflict between their religion versus the empirical sciences, they merely separate the two and all is well. As long as the analytical methods of science are not used to probe religious issues, which are matters of faith. This is a pathological form of the Selection Effect, Belief has always been stronger than reason. This division creates an unhealthy schizm between the acceptable science of objects within the galaxy and the 'amazing' extra-galactic world. Symptoms of range from the compartementalisation of the various branches of astronomy to lack of communication between galactic and extra-galactic astronomers.

REFERENCES

Schmidt,M.: 1990, in Modern Cosmology in Retrospect eds. Bertotto,B. et al., Cambridge Univ. Press. p.349 Schmidt : "My optical spectra showed several emission lines in the red part of the spectrum. I discussed them at a conference on extragalactic radio sources held at the Goddard Space Science Institute in New York in 1962. I attempted to explain the spectrum in terms of helium emission from an expanding shell, but did not publish this interpretation." - Maarten Schmidt comment made in 1990 discussing the time just before he changed his mind and 'invented' quasar redshift. Home Page.
 

Quasars

are

not

black

holes,

they

are

laser

stars

within

our

galaxy.

http://laserstars.org/glossary/quasar.html

Laser Stars - Quasars 2008 December

dvd rental

dvd


Quasars are not black holes, they are laser stars within our galaxy.

Rules




© 2005 Internet Explorer 5+ or Netscape 6+

Recommended Sites: 1. Arts - Business - Computers - Games - Health - Home - Kids and Teens - News - Recreation - Reference - Regional - Science - Shopping - Society - Sports - World Miss Gallery - Top Anime Hentai - DVD rental by mail - Electricity Suppliers - Personal Loans - Extranet - Payday Loan - The eBay Song
2008-12-02 09:59:12

Copyright 2005, 2006 by Webmaster
Websites is cool :)