In 2014, it was announced that the Pavo–Indus Supercluster is a lobe in a greater supercluster, Laniakea, that is centered on the Great Attractor. The Virgo Supercluster would also be part of this greater supercluster, thus becoming the local supercluster.[10]
In 1983, in a paper by Winkler et al it was suggested based on redshift maps of the distribution of galaxies that the Pavo–Indus Supercluster may be connected to the Centaurus Supercluster.[7] Later in 1984, in a collaboration with astronomer Tony Fairall and in a separate paper by Fairall published in 1988 titled "A redshift map of the Triangulum Australe–Ara region: further indication that Centaurus and Pavo are one and the same supercluster" it was concluded based on distribution of galaxies in redshift space that the Pavo–Indus supercluster was indeed connected to the Centaurus and Hydra supercluster and that the Virgo Supercluster was an appendage of a larger structure involving these superclusters.[8] Later studies concluded that Pavo–Indus formed part of a wall of galaxies similar in size to the CfA2 Great Wall, dubbed the Norma Wall[17] with the Norma Cluster at its center similar to the Coma Cluster.[18][17] This wall encompasses the Pavo–Indus supercluster through the Norma Cluster, passing the ZOA in the Great Attractor region, to meet up with the Centaurus–Crux Cluster at a redshift at about 5,700–6,200 km/s s and the CIZA J1324.7−5736 cluster at a redshift of 5700 km/s[17] while also splitting off to form the Centaurus Wall[19] passing the galactic plane to meet up with Centaurus Cluster[20] where the supercluster originates.[13]
Di Nel la H. et al found no evidence of a connection between Pavo–Indus and the Perseus–Pisces Supercluster.[11] However, Tully et al. revealed the existence of a filamentary extension of the Pavo–Indus Supercluster known as the Arch[10] that caps the Local Void in the supergalactic north and provides a connection to the Perseus–Pisces Supercluster[14][15] before terminating close to the NGC 7242 Cluster.[14]
The Pavo–Indus supercluster lies physically close to the Ophiuchus Supercluster and may be connected in an unknown filament between the two superclusters.[21]
^ abWinkler, H. (1983). "The Spatial Distribution of Galaxies in the Southern Sky". Monthly Notes of the Astronomical Society of South Africa. 42: 74. Bibcode:1983MNSSA..42...74W. ISSN0024-8266.