..well...1st off, if you was at the galactic nucleus, you would be muscularly diss-assembled..
...so, i am assuming you are assuming..
in that cast, speculation says that you would see nothing like the 'day-night' cycles known here on earth..there would be far too many 'sun's' around , and they would be much, much closer to you, [to your observation point], than you are to any sun's we see from here.
the 'stars' would command a whole new perception...they would all be 'sun's'.. and there light and influence would be far more intense than just little twinkly things in the sky.
The closer you were to the center of our galaxy, the greater the odds there would be numerous suns shinning down an you constantly...visible day and night..
if you were to view the heavens form a point say,..three quarters of the way to the center of the galaxies from here, there would be literally dozens of stars visible in the sky at any given hour of the day..
'inward' from that point, the number of sun's visible and affective to your position, would increase dramatically as you continued to close the distance between you and the center of the galaxies..
eventually, your 'planets' orbital stability would alter, and would inevitably surrender to other greater gravitational influence, and it would begin to elipicticalize in its rotation, and surrender to the greatest gravitational force.
What an adventure tho..huh..?...just takeing the journey with my emagination gave me a rush..!!
2007-03-25 15:02:45
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answer #1
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answered by olddogwatchin 5
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Because of the high star density near the nucleus it would be difficult to get a night time. In otherwords, there would be so many stars there would be no milky way as we think of it.
HTH
Charles
2007-03-25 21:23:05
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answer #2
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answered by Charles 6
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The massive conglomeration of close stars would obscure everything else.
2007-03-26 12:35:14
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answer #3
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answered by Billy Butthead 7
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