Galaxies Cluster Toward the Great Attractor
Galaxies dot the sky like
jewels in the direction
of a mass so large it is known simply as the
Great Attractor.
The galaxies
pictured above are part of a
cluster of galaxies
called
ACO 3627 near the center of the Great Attractor.
Previously, this
cluster of galaxies, also known as the Norma Cluster, was largely
unstudied because dust in the disk of
our own Galaxy obscured much of its light.
The Great Attractor is a diffuse mass concentration
fully 250 million light-years away,
but so large it pulls our own
Milky Way Galaxy and
millions of other galaxies towards it.
Many of the galaxies in
ACO 3627
are slowly heading towards
collisions with each other.