Quasars, an abbreviation for quasi-stellar radio sources, are distant objects that look like stars through a telescope but that emit far more electromagnetic radiation than an entire normal galaxy of stars. An example is the bright object below and to the left of center in Fig; the other elongated objects in this image are normal galaxies. The leading model for the structure of a quasar is a galaxy with a supermassive black hole at its center. In this model, the radiation is emitted by interstellar gas and dust within the galaxy as this material falls toward the black hole. The radiation is thought to emanate from a region just a few light-years in diameter. (The diffuse glow surrounding the bright quasar shown in Fig. is thought to be this quasar’s host galaxy.) To investigate this model of quasars and to study other exotic astronomical objects, the Russian Space Agency has placed a radio telescope in a large orbit around the earth. When this telescope is 77,000 km from earth and the signals it receives are combined with signals from the ground-based telescopes of the VLBA, the resolution is that of a single radio telescope 77,000 km in diameter. What is the size of the smallest detail that this arrangement can resolve in quasar 3C 405, which is 7.2 x 108 light-years from earth, using radio waves at a frequency of 1665 MHz? (Hint: Use Rayleigh’s criterion.) Give your answer in lightyears and in kilometers.
Quasars, an abbreviation for quasi-stellar radio sources, are distant objects that look like stars through a telescope but that emit far more
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