The Most Violent Galaxy in the Universe Found - 38 000 km/s Winds

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Hello and welcome! My name is Anton and in this video, we will talk about the discovery of the most powerful quasar in the universe.
Image Credit: International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/P. Marenfeld

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"Kind of probably safe" is the best kind of safe

Ushakov_Mykyta
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The real question is, how does anton keep his fade so fresh, while my mop head stuck in quarantine.

jejshmemeken
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Hey wonderful Anton! An astronomy student here. Been watching your videos for a bit more than 6 months now, wonderful content by a wonderful person. I am currently working with gamma-ray bursts data using Fermi telescope. Prior to this I did some work on quasar data with SDSS but couldn't finish it unfortunately. What I couldn't make out was how do I differentiate between normal and BAL quasars. I know it is not your content type but if you can make a video on how to differentiate between these two quasars and those which are NOT good and how to distinguish them based on their spectrum that will be really helpful to me. Cheers!

scarletangel
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Hello wonderful person, I think your fascination with quasars is a blessing for all of us, please do not lose it

DicoTheRedstoner
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Auto captions made it "hello 1/4 persons this is anton..."

nachtraumom
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So humanity has a spotlight made by a crazy quasar shining right upon us? Sweet. Even neighboring galaxies understand how unique and amazing we are.

vjm
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Hello wonderful persons, this is you're a wonderful person Mr Anton, giving us the view of our universe just you sir

rajeshkumar-yeuh
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The best part of this news is the *distance from the Milky Way* . Also, Centaurus A is gorgeous. Thanks for the bonus image.

BuildingCenter
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Hello my name is brad im from Australia and i love watching your videos man i try to watch all and all i have watched i have enjoyed so much so thankyou for your efforts

letbloodfalldown
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Anton you're videos are out of this world! ❤

mawage
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I first read about quasars when I was 12 and my mom got me a subscription to this science journal. It was this subject that got me interested in physics

So fascinating

ThomasMilne
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It's really heartening to see that many Galaxies have that wonderfull Kamikaze attitude.       " As a Galaxy I've pretty much been there done that . . . . time to explode violently. " Way to go, Galaxies.

sciencetroll
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Dayum this galaxy needs some anger management courses

vytautasdanielius
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You know the milky way once being a quasar explains a lot and could solve for the lack of life around us. A quasar could have stripped the other places around us

Musiclover-qhmv
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I grew up in a time when scientists did not know what was causing quasars. Guess I am old now.

chabis
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I love when you make videos about quasars, Anton. More quasars, please!

willsee
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Whit or whitout pandemia, this is the best science channel at all. Abrazo desde Uruguay, and thank for your job.

marcelosoutocamiou
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Trying too keep up with the videos are hard but I love learning more about astronomy

od
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*5* *Facts* *About* *Planet* *Mars*

*1* Mars once had oceans, but adding them up would give you just 1.5 percent of all water on Earth.

*2* Mars has polar caps like Earth, containing frozen carbon dioxide and a small amount of water too.

*3* The reason Mars is red is because it has iron oxide on its surface, which we commonly know as rust. This is what gives the planet Mars its reddish appearance.

*4* In 2001, a huge dust storm covered the entire planet for several Earth days.

*5* Mars has two moons, their names are Deimos and Phobos.

scifactss
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At such a large scale this is essentially incomprehensible. Just imagine the power and generation of power able to be harnessed from a single quasar.

averakair