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Quasars and Active Galactic Nuclei (Slide Set Number 93)
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- Slide 1: Optical spectra of various kinds of active galactic nuclei
- Slide 2: Broad-band spectrum of Mkn 421 with connected images
- Slide 3: Variability of active nuclei in various spectral domains
- Slide 4: A selection of Seyfert galaxies
- Slide 5: Closeup views of Seyfert nuclei from HST
- Slide 6: Composite emission-line spectrum of NGC 4151
- Slide 7: NGC 1275 H-alpha filaments
- Slide 8: An HST view of the enigmatic spectacle NGC 1275
- Slide 9: A hidden AGN - infrared images of IC 5063
- Slide 10: The interaction of jets and clouds in NGC 4151
- Slide 11: Galaxy, jet, and obscuring disk in NGC 1068
- Slide 12: The hidden nucleus of NGC 1068 revealed by polarization
- Slide 13: Radio structure in radio galaxies
- Slide 14: Nuclear structure in nearby 3C radio galaxies
- Slide 15: High-redshift radio galaxies in the early universe
- Slide 16: The blowtorch jet in the radio galaxy NGC 6251
- Slide 17: The optical jet of M87
- Slide 18: The supermassive central object in M87
- Slide 19: Optical jets in radio galaxies
- Slide 20: The powerful radio galaxy Cygnus A
- Slide 21: A typical QSO - PKS 1117-248
- Slide 22: The brightest quasar: 3C 273 and its jet
- Slide 23: The double QSO 0957+561
- Slide 24: The Einstein Cross gravitational lens 2237+030
- Slide 25: The quasar epoch
- Slide 26: Anomalous QSO/galaxy associations and the redshift controversy
- Slide 27: Quasars as lighthouses: the Lyman-alpha forest at low and high redshift
- Slide 28: Quasar host galaxies revealed by HST
- Slide 29: An absorption-line galaxy in front of the quasar 3C 196
- Slide 30: The superluminal radio source in the gamma-ray blazar 3C 279
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