Large-scale dynamics Since the late 1980s it has been apparent that not only the
Local Group, but all matter out to a distance of at least 50
Mpc is experiencing a bulk flow on the order of 600 km/s in the direction of the
Norma Cluster (Abell 3627). Lynden-Bell et al. (1988) dubbed the cause of this the "
Great Attractor". The Great Attractor is now understood to be the center of mass of an even larger structure of galaxy clusters and basin of attraction (BoA), dubbed "
Laniakea", which includes the Virgo and Hydra-Centaurus Superclusters (including the Local Group) and several other superclusters and structures. Laniakea has therefore been proposed to be called a
supercluster cocoon instead to distinguish the structure from smaller embedded superclusters traditionally defined as high-density regions. The Great Attractor, together with the entire Laniakea, is found to be moving toward
Shapley Supercluster, with center of
Shapley Attractor, and may be itself potentially part of this even greater concentration.
Dark matter The LS has a total mass
M ≈ and a total optical luminosity
L ≈ . By comparison, the
mass-to-light ratio for the
Milky Way is 63.8 assuming a solar
absolute magnitude of 4.83, a Milky Way absolute magnitude of −20.9, and a Milky Way mass of . These ratios are one of the main arguments in favor of the presence of large amounts of
dark matter in the universe; if dark matter did not exist, much smaller mass-to-light ratios would be expected. ==Maps==