Yes there was a few threads on this before a while ago. However I am not sure if a consensus was ever drawn as to whether we (our solar system) is, or
is not, technically a member of the Sag Galaxy?...
[edit on 10-11-2008 by Lucid Lunacy]
Imagine the shock of growing up in a loving family with people you call "Mum" and "Dad" and then, suddenly, learning that you are actually adopted! This same sense of shock came as scientists announced that the Sun, the Moon, our planet and its siblings, were not born into the familiar band of stars known as the Milky Way galaxy, but we actually belong to a strange formation with the unfamiliar name of the Sagittarius Dwarf galaxy!
Sagittarius dwarf is now being torn apart by immense tidal forces over hundreds of millions of years. Numerical simulations suggest that stars ripped out from the dwarf would be spread out in a long stellar stream along its path, which were subsequently detected.

Originally posted by Kliskey
Rather interesting read for me this morning. It clicks when you think about it.
Imagine the shock of growing up in a loving family with people you call "Mum" and "Dad" and then, suddenly, learning that you are actually adopted! This same sense of shock came as scientists announced that the Sun, the Moon, our planet and its siblings, were not born into the familiar band of stars known as the Milky Way galaxy, but we actually belong to a strange formation with the unfamiliar name of the Sagittarius Dwarf galaxy!
Source
It certainly clears the question up for me as to why we see the Milky Way on its side.
But it also brings up more questions, such as the ones already asked on here.
For example the move through the plane and how it effects us etc.
Please discuss, or point me in the right direction if its already been discussed![]()
[edit on 10/11/2008 by Kliskey]