Chapter 175 - 174: Quasar
In the Dark Universe.
A swirling nebula is rapidly rotating, with a pitch-black color at its center.
The edge of the nebula is vast, with a radius of half a light-year, emitting a faint glow and intense radiation; the light is dominated by a golden hue, accompanied by a mix of various colors. From a distance, it looks like a colorful giant cloud, extremely dazzling.
It was this scene that the scientists within the Wandering Star System had observed, prompting them to issue a warning.
These experienced scientists knew very well what the colorful giant cloud in front of them was: a quasar, one of the most terrifying celestial phenomena, not inferior to a black hole.
The reason quasars stand shoulder to shoulder with black holes
Is that at the heart of a quasar is a super black hole.
The super black hole at the center of the quasar uses its powerful gravity to capture surrounding objects, and when they reach a certain distance, it completely tears apart the captured objects, turning them into nebula material revolving around the central black hole. This extremely dense and complex layer of nebula material is known as the accretion disk.
Different from the black holes at the center of a celestial nebula.
For some unknown reason, quasars have not formed a stable system structure, named for their resemblance to both stars and nebulae, while black holes at the center of celestial nebulas have reached a balance with other small-mass bodies.
