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  1. Maarten Schmidt (Groningen, 28 de diciembre de 1929-17 de septiembre de 2022) [1] fue un astrónomo neerlandés. Fue el primero en medir las distancias a los lejanos quásares, descubriendo por tanto que su luminosidad es muy elevada, y que probablemente sean los objetos más antiguos que se han observado.

  2. Maarten Schmidt (28 December 1929 – 17 September 2022) was a Dutch-born American astronomer who first measured the distances of quasars. He was the first astronomer to identify a quasar, and so was pictured on the March cover of Time magazine in 1966.

  3. 22 de sept. de 2022 · Maarten Schmidt, who in 1963 became the first astronomer to identify a quasar, a small, intensely bright object several billion light years away, and in the process upended standard...

  4. 29 de sept. de 2022 · Maarten Schmidt, Francis L. Moseley Professor of Astronomy, Emeritus, at Caltech, passed away on Saturday, September 17, 2022. He was 92 years old. Schmidt is best known for his 1963 discovery of quasars—ferociously bright and faraway cosmic objects powered by supermassive black holes.

  5. Maarten Schmidt was a Dutch-born American astronomer whose identification of the wavelengths of the radiation emitted by quasars (quasi-stellar objects) led to the theory that they may be among the most distant, as well as the oldest, objects ever observed.

  6. 23 de sept. de 2022 · Maarten Schmidt, astronomer whose discovery of quasars revealed the solar bodies that roam the universe, dies at 92.

  7. Maarten Schmidt is a Dutch-American astronomer who discovered the red shift of quasars and contributed to the Big Bang theory. He also studied x-ray and gamma ray sources and worked at Caltech and the Hale Observatories.