Quasar •
3C 273: The first identified Quasar, notable for its relativistic jets (z=0.158). •
3C 48: One of the earliest known Quasar with a measured redshift (z=0.367). •
TON 618: An ultra-luminous quasar hosting one of the most massive known black holes (~66 billion solar masses), located at a redshift of z=2.219. •
Twin Quasar: The first gravitationally lensed quasar, split into two images by an intervening galaxy (z=1.41). •
Einstein Cross: A quasar lensed into four images forming a cross, demonstrating gravitational lensing predicted by general relativity (z=1.695). •
Pōniuāʻena: One of the most distant quasars known (z=7.52), formed ~700 million years after the Big Bang, offering insights into early black hole formation. •
CTA-102: A radio-loud quasar known for its variability (z=1.037). •
Cloverleaf Quasar: A quasar lensed into four images resembling a cloverleaf, brightest known high-redshift source of CO emission (z=2.558).
Radio Galaxy •
Messier 87: A giant elliptical galaxy with a supermassive black hole (6.5 billion solar masses), imaged by the Event Horizon Telescope in 2019. Its jets extend thousands of light-years (z=0.00428). •
Centaurus A: One of the closest radio galaxies, known for its dust lanes and relativistic jets (0.00183). •
Cygnus A: A powerful radio source identified with a tidally distorted galaxy, a benchmark for studying AGN feedback (z=0.0561). •
Hercules A: Features massive radio jets spanning ~1 million light-years, observed with radio telescopes like VLA (z=0.154). •
Alcyoneus: The largest known radio galaxy, with jets extending 16.3 million light-years, discovered using LOFAR (z=0.2467). •
TGSS J1530+1049: The most distant radio galaxy known (z=5.72), providing insights into early universe structures.
Seyfert Galaxy •
Messier 77: A prototypical Type 2 Seyfert with star-forming rings, extensively studied using ALMA for black hole interactions (z=0.00379). •
NGC 4151: A classic Type 1 Seyfert, noted for variable X-ray emission and a well-studied accretion disk (z=0.00332). •
Circinus Galaxy: A nearby Type 2 Seyfert with ejected gas rings, bright in infrared due to dust (z=0.00145). •
NGC 7469: A luminous infrared Seyfert 1 with starburst activity, included in early Seyfert studies (z=0.0163). •
NGC 7319: Part of
Stephan's Quintet, harbors a hidden AGN revealed by Webb Telescope observations (z=0.0225). •
Markarian 231: A ultraluminous infrared galaxy with a quasar-like AGN, showing evidence of a major merger (z=0.0415).
Blazar •
BL Lacertae: The prototype BL Lac object, characterized by minimal emission lines and variability (z=0.069). •
Markarian 501: A TeV blazar known for gamma-ray flares and jet studies; a key target for high-energy astronomy (z=0.034). •
PKS 0537-286: A distant gamma-ray blazar, one of NASA's top gamma-ray sources, probing early universe black holes (z=3.104). == See also ==