"The fact that the Milky Way is seen in the sky at an angle has always puzzled astronomers. If we originated from the Milky Way, we ought to be oriented to the galaxy's ecliptic, with the planets aligned around our Sun in much the same angle as our Sun aligns with the Milky Way. Instead, as first suggested by researcher Matthew Perkins Erwin, the odd angle suggests that our Sun is influenced by some other system. Together with data from the Two-Micron All Sky Survey we now know what it is. We actually belong to the Sagittarius Dwarf galaxy.
"We sifted several thousand interesting stars from a catalog of half a billion," said co-author Michael Skrutskie, U.Va. professor of astronomy and principal investigator for the 2MASS project. "By tuning our maps of the sky to the 'right' kind of star, the Sagittarius system jumped into view."
Read more at:
http://viewzone2.com/milkywayx.html
For me, this answers A LOT of questions, especially about the planets in our solar system going nuts.
Replies
No, we are a part of the Milky Way Galaxy. Milky Way and Andromeda (the neighbour) is two large galaxies.
The University of Virginia says this is DISINFORMATION!!!!!!!!!!!1
Check it out:
http://www.astro.virginia.edu/~mfs4n/sgr/
What???
This Physical Universe and Galaxy and all thee other Billions of Stars ,Galaxies and Universes and Solar Systems in this one tiny winy insy winsy little witty bitty Universe,they are All contained or exist within a Single Atom ,a Very big Atom, not like the tiny winy insee winsee little witty bitty atoms we can not see,and there are Trillions of these Giant Atoms but where do all these Atoms originate from? Where did the first Atom come from? Cause inside the Giant Atom is a very small tiny winy insee winsee little wiitty bitty Universe or Galaxy called > The Milky Way Galaxy< (Cows milk or breast milk from your moms boobies?) But i dont see any milk out there in space so how can we be sure this is really the Milky Way Galaxy? MOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!! Cow Talk!
Interesting information!
To those interested to learn more about this topic, a little deeper research and discussions about this topic was discussed in ATS.
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