Superclusters are large groupings of smaller galaxy groups and clusters, and are among the largest structures of the cosmos.
The Earth is part of the Milky Way Galaxy which in turn is part of the Local Group Cluster. The Local Group Cluster itself is part of the Virgo super cluster.
The Milky Way is part of the Local Group Cluster, part of the Virgo Super Cluster.
Ours is right here.
Moon (Although some moons are larger than planets), Planet, (Although some planets are larger than Stars) Star, Solar System, Supernova, Cluster, Super Cluster. Universe.
A constellation has no defined size.
based on CMB(cosmic microwave background radiation) the motion velocity of local super cluster is 627+/- 22 km/sec
The galactic cluster in which the Milky Way is located is called The Local Group. (Not very inspiring, is it?)
Earth belongs to the Milky Way Galaxy, which belongs to the The Local Group, which is part of the Virgo Super Cluster
It is the Saraswati supercluster.
A "Super Star Cluster", or "SSC", contains lots of young, massive stars that ionize a surrounding H II region, which is in turn surrounded by a cocoon of dust. Current scientific thought is that the "Westerlund 1" may be the Milky Way's sole cluster that deserves the designation of "SSC".
No, The Local Group is not. The local group is just an small cluster of a few galaxies on the outskirts of the Local Super-cluster which the Virgo cluster is in the center of it.
A collection of galactic groups form a cluster of galaxies. A supercluster is the largest known structure. Galaxies can exist outside of a group or cluster, but the estimated amount is only about 5%. However, there is a possibility that these galaxies may have interacted or merged with other galaxies in the past,