A spiral galaxy is a kind of galaxy that looks like a flat, slowly rotatingdisk with a bulge in the centre, and spiral patterns extending outward from the bulge. It contains stars, gas, dust, dark matter and a supermassive black hole at its centre.[1]
Galaxies were long thought to be nebulae. The spiral nebula as a type was first described by Edwin Hubble in his 1936 work The Realm of the Nebulae.[2] They are now listed as galaxies, and are named after their shape.
The barred spiral galaxy is an important and common type of spiral galaxy. There are three other kinds of spiral galaxies. Grand-design spiral galaxies have two well-shaped and well-defined arms. Multiple-arm spiral galaxies have more arms. In flocculent spiral galaxies, it is hard to see the arms at all, as they are choppy and are ill-defined.[3]
About 60% of galaxies in the universe near us (the 'local universe') are spiral and irregular galaxies.[4] They are mostly found in low-density parts of the universe,[5] and are rare in the centers of galaxy clusters.[6]
Spiral arms
Spiral arms are regions in spiral galaxies. They often contain dust,gas and star clusters of young ,hot and massive stars. They extend from the central bulge area of spiral and barred spiral galaxies. The young, hot and massive stars are why the arms are brighter than the center of the galaxy.[7] Some spiral galaxies have yellow, 'fossil' arms of older stars.[8]
Milky Way
Our own Milky Way was found to be a spiral galaxy in the early 20th century. In the 1990s it was found to be a barred spiral galaxy. The bar is difficult to see from our position in the Galactic disk.[9] The most convincing evidence for its existence comes from a survey, [10] performed by the Spitzer Space Telescope, of stars in the Galactic center.[7][dead link]
References
↑'Supermassive' means not just large size and huge mass, but huge gravitational effect.