The Milky Way is a spiral galaxy located in the Supergalactic Plane, and while we already know it’s special because it contains Earth, it’s remarkable in other ways, too. Look across our cosmic backyard, for instance, and you’ll find the Milky Way is something of a rarity. In the Supergalatic Plane, measuring about a billion light years across, there’s a super-high concentration of galaxies, but the vast majority of them are elliptical. Spiral galaxies like the Milky Way are far less common, and astronomers have long wanted to know why.
“Among the brightest galaxies, there are around twice as many ellipticals as spirals close to the Supergalactic Plane – it is not an enormous excess, but it is statistically significant,” explains Dr Till Sawala, a postdoctoral researcher at Durham University…