Radio galaxies Many galaxies are strong radio emitters, called
radio galaxies. Some of the more notable are
Centaurus A and
Messier 87.
Quasars (short for "quasi-stellar radio source") were one of the first point-like radio sources to be discovered. Quasars' extreme
redshift led us to conclude that they are distant active galactic nuclei, believed to be powered by
black holes.
Active galactic nuclei have jets of charged particles which emit
synchrotron radiation. One example is
3C 273, the optically brightest quasar in the sky. Merging
galaxy clusters often show diffuse radio emission.
Cosmic microwave background The cosmic microwave background is
blackbody background radiation left over from the
Big Bang (the rapid expansion, roughly 13.8 billion years ago, that was the beginning of the
universe.
Extragalactic pulses - Fast Radio Burst D. R. Lorimer and others analyzed archival survey data and found a 30-
jansky dispersed burst, less than 5 milliseconds in duration, located 3° from the
Small Magellanic Cloud. They reported that the burst properties argue against a physical association with our Galaxy or the Small Magellanic Cloud. In a recent paper, they argue that current models for the free electron content in the universe imply that the burst is less than 1 giga
parsec distant. The fact that no further bursts were seen in 90 hours of additional observations implies that it was a singular event such as a supernova or coalescence (fusion) of relativistic objects. It is suggested that hundreds of similar events could occur every day and, if detected, could serve as cosmological probes. Radio pulsar surveys such as Astropulse-SETI@home offer one of the few opportunities to monitor the radio sky for impulsive burst-like events with millisecond durations. Because of the isolated nature of the observed phenomenon, the nature of the source remains speculative. Possibilities include a black hole-
neutron star collision, a neutron star-neutron star collision, a black hole-black hole collision, or some phenomenon not yet considered. In 2010 there was a new report of 16 similar pulses from the Parkes Telescope which were clearly of terrestrial origin, but in 2013 four pulse sources were identified that supported the likelihood of a genuine extragalactic pulsing population. These pulses are known as
fast radio bursts (FRBs). The first observed burst has become known as the
Lorimer burst.
Blitzars are one proposed explanation for them. ==Sources: not yet observed==