
TL;DR
This paper reviews the historical development of quasar discovery, highlighting key observations and technological advances that led to understanding quasars as luminous galactic nuclei with high redshifts.
Contribution
It provides a detailed historical account of how quasars were identified and understood, emphasizing the role of radio and optical measurements in their discovery.
Findings
Identification of 3C 273 as a quasar with redshift 0.16
Use of lunar occultations for precise radio positioning
Recognition of quasars as luminous galactic nuclei
Abstract
Although the extragalactic nature of 3C 48 and other quasi stellar radio sources was discussed as early as 1960 by John Bolton and others, it was rejected largely because of preconceived ideas about what appeared to be unrealistically high radio and optical luminosities. Not until the 1962 occultations of the strong radio source 3C 273 at Parkes, which led Maarten Schmidt to identify 3C 273 with an apparent stellar object at a redshift of 0.16, was the true nature understood. Successive radio and optical measurements quickly led to the identification of other quasars with increasingly large redshifts and the general, although for some decades not universal, acceptance of quasars as the very luminous nuclei of galaxies. Curiously, 3C 273, which is one of the strongest extragalactic sources in the sky, was first cataloged in 1959 and the magnitude 13 optical counterpart was observed at…
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