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Perspectives Department: So what's a "Laniakea"?

A slice of the Laniakea supercluster in the supergalactic equatorial plane. The black dot indicates the location of the Milky Way galaxy. Each white speck is an individual galaxy. Shaded contours represent density, with high densities shown as red, intermediate as green and voids as blue. The white streaks are 'velocity flow streams'. Image: SDvision
A slice of the Laniakea supercluster in the supergalactic equatorial plane. The black dot indicates the location of the Milky Way galaxy. Each white speck is an individual galaxy. Shaded contours represent density, with high densities shown as red, intermediate as green and voids as blue. The white streaks are ‘velocity flow streams’. Image: SDvision. The Guardian

Milky Way is on the outskirts of ‘immeasurable heaven’ supercluster

September 3, 2014

by Ian Sample

theguardian

Astronomers discover that our galaxy is a suburb of a supercluster of 100,000 large galaxies they have called Laniakea

In what amounts to a back-to-school gift for pupils with nerdier leanings, researchers have added a fresh line to the cosmic address of humanity. No longer will a standard home address followed by “the Earth, the solar system, the Milky Way, the universe” suffice for aficionados of the extended astronomical location system.

The extra line places the Milky Way in a vast network of neighbouring galaxies or “supercluster” that forms a spectacular web of stars and planets stretching across 520m light years of our local patch of universe. Named Laniakea, meaning “immeasurable heaven” in Hawaiian, the supercluster contains 100,000 large galaxies that together have the mass of 100 million billion suns.

Our home galaxy, the Milky Way, lies on the far outskirts of Laniakea near the border with another supercluster of galaxies named Perseus-Pisces. “When you look at it in three dimensions, is looks like a sphere that’s been badly beaten up and we are over near the edge, being pulled towards the centre,” said Brent Tully, an astronomer at the University of Hawaii in Honolulu.

Astronomers have long known that just as the solar system is part of the Milky Way, so the Milky Way belongs to a cosmic structure that is much larger still. But their attempts to define the larger structure had been thwarted because it was impossible to work out where one cluster of galaxies ended and another began.

Tully’s team gathered measurements on the positions and movement of more than 8,000 galaxies and, after discounting the expansion of the universe, worked out which were being pulled towards us and which were being pulled away. This allowed the scientists to define superclusters of galaxies that all moved in the same direction (if you’re reading this story on a mobile device, click here to watch a video explaining the research).

The work published in Nature gives astronomers their first look at the vast group of galaxies to which the Milky Way belongs. A narrow arch of galaxies connects Laniakea to the neighbouring Perseus-Pisces supercluster, while two other superclusters called Shapley and Coma lie on the far side of our own.

Tully said the research will help scientists understand why the Milky Way is hurtling through space at 600km a second towards the constellation of Centaurus. Part of the reason is the gravitational pull of other galaxies in our supercluster.

“But our whole supercluster is being pulled in the direction of this other supercluster, Shapley, though it remains to be seen if that’s all that’s going on,” said Tully.

Laniakea SuperclusterThe Laniakea supercluster. Image: SDvisionSuperclusters are the largest cosmic structures known to exist in the universe. Writing in an accompanying article, Elmo Tempel, an astronomer at the Tartu Observatory in Estonia, praised the name given to Earth’s supercluster. “It is taken from the Hawaiian words lani, which means heaven, and akea, which means spacious or immeasurable. That is just the name one would expect for the whopping system that we live in.”

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