English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Very limited I think. Observation would show the stars form a ball with nothing outside. The night would not be dark enough to see faint objects outside with all those stars in the sky

2006-07-26 05:46:05 · 6 answers · asked by bwadsp 5 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

6 answers

I am an Asronomer, and did some reading about this very subject in "Burnhams Celestrial HandbooK" (the best ever published), and, if we lived in the center of a "gobular cluster", all that we would see around us is millions is various stars of different color/temp relatioships. It would be impossible for us to either see or view the known Universe because of the multitude of stars surrounding our place in the center of the cluster. There would be "no night" upon the Earth, because the stars within the cluster would suround us from every direction and angle and vicinity. we would be exposed to eternal "daylight" without "seasons" and the "climate" upon Earth would be the same in every place. Polar "ice-caps" would be a thing of fantasy and a joke for the inhabitants of Earth to scoff at due to its impossibility. There are believed to be more than a thousand globular clusters surrounding the entire Miky Way Galaxy in the overall shape of a "sphere" around the Galaxy...and we are very fortunate that we don't happen to exist within one!!...because, as I mentioned, there would be no "night" there

2006-07-26 07:43:11 · answer #1 · answered by LARRY M 3 · 2 0

We are in the middle of a globular cluster according to the current thinking. The example is a ballon that is expanding.

2006-07-26 14:22:50 · answer #2 · answered by Dr M 5 · 0 0

it would be like having an isle seat in the middle of the aeroplane, we couldbn't even peer over the fat brat sat in the window seat to get a peak at whats outside. We would probably believe in god, and be at peace and think that the stars are just there to comfort us at night, I doubt we would even think of what is past the stars, it would be assumed that there were more stars like a crystal latice, uniformity forever and all that jazz

2006-07-28 07:13:26 · answer #3 · answered by Dirk Wellington-Catt 3 · 0 0

In the middle would be a good chance of extreme gravityand black holes

So probably not much could be seen viewing out.

2006-07-26 14:56:21 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well yea this one time i was smoking rocks and that **** happened to me too

2006-07-26 12:58:18 · answer #5 · answered by the holy divine one 3 · 0 0

wtf?

2006-07-26 12:49:37 · answer #6 · answered by Jess 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers