vincentm said:
I hope this is the right section. But, can anyone here tell me how is it that we know the our galaxy is a spiral one, i don't doubt what I've read, but i need an explanation. I read something about density waves and how they power the rotation of our galaxy andor other galaxies. But how do we know for sure ours is a spiral body?
It was William Parsons (3rd Earl of Rosse) that first observed spiral structure in some "nebulae".
Many people over the ensuing years speculated that the Milky Way had spiral arms too.
However, it was not until 1951 that the first scientific evidence was presented. In the 1940s Walter Baade recognized that in (other) spiral galaxies, the older, redder, stars tended to reside in the central regions (of the galaxy) while younger (blue-white) stars are to be found in the spiral arms, along with HII regions.
In 1951 at Yerkes Observatory, William Morgan, along with Donald Osterbrock and Stewart Sharpless, determined the distances to many (dozens) of blue giants and HII regions "close" to our solar system. This enabled them to map segments of a few of MW spiral arms for the first time.
"Morgan announced these findings at a 1951 meeting of the AAS, presenting a model of the spiral arms that used cotton balls to depict the positions of the luminous nebuluae. The results were greeted with a rare, emotional ovation that included clapping of hands and stomping of feet" (page 434 of "Archives of the Universe", by Bartusiak)
The results were published in the article:
"Some features of Galactic Structure in the Neighborhood of the Sun"
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 57 (1952). By Morgan, Sharpless, & Osterbrock.
Radio observations soon advanced our knowledge of the MW spiral structure (particularly the early ones by Oort, Muller, and van de Hulst).