We present the current standing of an investigation into the structure of the
Milky Way. We use smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) to simulate the ISM gas
in the Milky Way under the effect of a number of different gravitational
potentials representing the spiral arms and nuclear bars, both fixed and
time-dependent. The gas is subject to ISM cooling and chemistry, enabling us to
track the CO and HI density. We use a 3D grid-based radiative transfer code to
simulate the emission from the SPH output, allowing for the construction of
synthetic longitude-velocity maps as viewed from the Earth. By comparing these
maps with the observed emission in CO and HI from the Milky Way (Dame et al.
2001, Kalberla et al. 2005), we can infer the arm/bar geometry that provides a
best fit to our Galaxy. By doing so we aim to answer key questions concerning
the morphology of the Milky Way such as the number of the spiral arms, the
pattern speeds of the bar(s) and arms, the pitch angle of the arms and shape of
the bar(s)Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, contributed talk, to appear in Proceedings of the
IAU Symposium No. 298, "Setting the scene for Gaia and LAMOST