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Originally posted by vick2075
The actual position of the solar system is currently about 20 parsecs above the galactic plane and is moving upward.
I don't know about the alignments with Andromeda, but to answer the question of why is there about 60 deg between ecliptic and GNP, the answer or to find the answer, we just have to look more closely to the finer details of astrophysical descriptions of other suns in the galaxy and try to figure their rotational direction whether ACD or CD and in which direction they are orbiting and by what angle they are doing so.
If they are all moving clockwise (and rotating ACD) but at reduced angle, say 20 or even 10 then our sun is a special case. Our sun may have been captured from a straying nearby dwarf galaxy.
Originally posted by tooo many pills
I love it! I didn't know we could see the spirals of the Andromeda galaxy with our naked eyes. I thought it would just look like another star.
...it makes sense now that I think about it because it is the closest galaxy to us and a galaxy's brightness is immense compared to a star's. I am definitely going to look for it, thanks for the info!
Also, didn't we base what we think our galaxy's shape looks like on the Andromeda galaxy? Aren't most of the pictures we see of the Milky Way actually Andromeda?