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A deep optical galaxy search behind the southern Milky Way and a subsequent redshift survey of the identified obscured galaxies traces clusters and superclusters into the deepest layers of Galactic foreground extinction (A_B <= 3^m - 5^m). In the Great Attractor region, we have identified a low-mass cluster (the Centaurus-Crux cluster) at (l, b, v, sigma) = (305.5deg, +5.5deg, 6214 km/s, 472 km/s) and found that ACO 3627 (the Norma cluster) at (l, b, v, sigma) = (325.3deg, -7.2deg, 4844 km/s, 848 km/s) is the most massive cluster in the Great Attractor region known to date. It is comparable in virial mass, richness and size to the well-known but more distant Coma cluster. The Norma cluster most likely marks the bottom of the potential well of the Great Attractor. It is located at the intersection of two main large-scale structures, the Centaurus Wall and the Norma supercluster. The flow field observed around the Great Attractor probably is caused by the confluence of these two massive structures.
The nature and the extent of the Great Attractor has been the subject of much debate, not in the least due to the unfortunate position of its central part being behind the Milky Way. We here present the latest results from our deep optical galaxy sea
Dust and stars in the plane of the Milky Way create a Zone of Avoidance in the extragalactic sky. Galaxies are distributed in gigantic labyrinth formations, filaments and great walls with occasional dense clusters. They can be traced all over the sky
In our systematic optical galaxy search behind the southern Milky Way, 3760 (mostly unknown) galaxies with diameters D > 0.2 arcminutes were identified in the Crux region (287 < l < 318 degrees, |b| < 10 degrees, Woudt & Kraan-Korteweg 1997). Prior t
About 25% of the optical extragalactic sky is obscured by the dust and stars of our Milky Way. Dynamically important structures might still lie hidden in this zone. Various approaches are presently being employed to uncover the galaxy distribution in