Originally posted by St Udio
sure we can 'see' the galactic plane...but...
great dreams. com: uses John Major Jenkins reckoning that the actual crossing the galactic plane will take 36 years to complete...
the crossing begun in 1980-through-2016
Uhhh, we're currently 67 light years north of the galactic plane. We are definately NOT in the middle of a crossing.
snoedel.punt.nl:
#1. tells us the alignment of the sun at the December solstice near the galactic center, is an event that occurs every 26,000 years , over a
period that lasts for 144 years to complete the crossing
That's precession and it has NOTHING to do with crossing a galactic plane, nor does it have any noticeable impact on earth other than the locations
of the stars in the sky.
au.answers.yahoo.com: points out... the dense part of the galactic plane is ~200 light-years thick...
its difficult to locate the exact galactic equator/plane any closer than 5 light-years.
So the date we, Earth & Sun, pass through the galactic plane/equator,
at a speed of 30 kilometers per second, has an error factor of 1/2 million years...
Good thing we're not within 1 to 2 million years of a crossing, we're 67 light years above it, well out of the error bar.