
This web page is designed to give everyone an idea of what our universe actually looks like. There are nine main maps on this web page, each one approximately ten times the scale of the previous one. The first map shows the nearest stars and then the other maps slowly expand out until we have reached the scale of the entire visible universe.
| 12.5 Light Years from the Sun | |
|---|---|
The Nearest Stars 
     The closest star to the Sun is only 7000 times further than the edge of
     our solar system.  This map shows all of the stellar systems that lie
     within 12.5 light years from us. | |
| 250 Light Years from the Sun | |
The Solar Neighbourhood 
     A large proportion of the stars visible with the naked eye are within
     250 light years.  This map shows this tiny section of our galaxy that
     surrounds our Sun. | |
| 5 000 Light Years from the Sun | |
The Orion Arm 
     The local arm of our galaxy is called the Orion Arm.  It is depicted
     here showing the millions of stars interspersed with clouds of 
     interstellar gas. | |
| 50 000 Light Years from the Sun | |
The Milky Way Galaxy 
     Our galaxy is a loose spiral disc of two hundred billion stars rotating
     around a compact centre.  This is a diagram showing the main features
     of the Galaxy. | |
| 500 000 Light Years from the Sun | |
The Satellite Galaxies 
     The Milky Way is surrounded by several dwarf galaxies slowly orbiting
     it in periods of billions of years.  This map shows the nearest of
     these satellite galaxies. | |
| 5 Million Light Years from the Sun | |
The Local Group 
     The Milky Way is gravitationally bound to two other large spiral
     galaxies as well as dozens of dwarf galaxies.  This local group of 
     galaxies is illustrated here. | |
| 100 Million Light Years from the Sun | |
The Virgo Supercluster 
     The local group of galaxies is just one of many centred around the
     massive Virgo Cluster.  Collectively, all of these groups and clusters
     form a unit known as the Virgo Supercluster shown here. | |
| 1 Billion Light Years from the Sun | |
The Neighbouring Superclusters 
     The distribution of galaxies in the universe is far from regular.  They
     tend to clump together into huge supercluster formations.  This map
     shows many of the superclusters within 1 billion light years of us. | |
| 14 Billion Light Years from the Sun | |
The Visible Universe 
     Although our knowledge of the large scale structure of the universe is
     incomplete, many large and small scale features are visible right out
     to the very edge of the visible universe.  The entire universe is fairly 
     uniform, as this map shows. | |
| Glossary | |
|---|---|
| This is a glossary which should hopefully explain most of the unexplained terms used in this web page. | |
| Useful Links | |
| This is my attempt at a list of other web pages which have maps and other useful data on various aspects of the universe. | |
| Negative Images | |
| Here are some negative image versions of some of the maps on this web page, showing dark objects against a white background, which may be easier to print. | |
| Copyright | |
| This is a formal copyright statement concerning the text, maps and images used on this website for anybody who wants to copy or use parts of this website. |