"Now no longer see the Milky Way as a little girl in her group," said Mark Reid, a researcher from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, as quoted by Wired, May 25, 2011. "We may argue that the Milky Way and Andromeda are twins," he said.
Unfortunately, Reid said, we are in the galaxy, so we can not see more clearly what kind of form our home. "The best way to find out is by measuring how fast our galaxy rotates, and the amount of mass that must be present in the structure to generate speed," he said.
Using the Very Large Baseline radio telescope, Reid and his team discovered that the Milky Way rotates at a speed of about 600 thousand miles per hour or 100 thousand miles per hour faster than expected.
via VIVAnews
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