The quasars QSO 0957+561A/B were discovered in early 1979 by an Anglo-American team around
Dennis Walsh, Robert Carswell and
Ray Weymann, with the aid of the 2.1 m Telescope at
Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona, United States. The team noticed that the two quasars were unusually close to each other, and that their
redshift and visible light spectrum were very similar to each other. They published their suggestion of "the possibility that they are two images of the same object formed by a
gravitational lens". The Twin Quasar was one of the first directly observable effects of gravitational lensing, which was described in 1936 by
Albert Einstein as a consequence of his 1916
general theory of relativity, though in that 1936 paper he also predicted "Of course, there is no hope of observing this phenomenon directly." Critics identified a difference in appearance between the two quasars in
radio frequency images. In mid-1979, a team led by David Roberts at the
Very Large Array (VLA) near Socorro, New Mexico, discovered a
relativistic jet emerging from quasar A with no corresponding equivalent in quasar B. Furthermore, the distance between the two images, 6
arcseconds, was too great to have been produced by the gravitational effect of the galaxy G1, a galaxy identified near quasar B. In 1980,
Peter J. Young and collaborators discovered that galaxy G1 is part of a
galaxy cluster which increases the gravitational deflection and can explain the observed distance between the images. Finally, a team led by Marc V. Gorenstein observed essentially identical relativistic jets on very small scales from both A and B in 1983 using
Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI). Subsequent, more detailed VLBI observations demonstrated the expected (parity reversed) magnification of the image B jet with respect to image A jet. The difference between the large-scale radio images is attributed to the special geometry needed for gravitational lensing, which is satisfied by the quasar but not by all of the extended jet emission seen by the VLA near image A. Slight spectral differences between quasar A and quasar B can be explained by different densities of the intergalactic medium in the light paths, resulting in differing
extinction. 30 years of observation made it clear that image A of the quasar reaches earth about 14 months earlier than the corresponding image B, resulting in a difference of path length of 1.1
ly. ==Possible planet==