Fortunately, you'll never need to deal with that problem,
since you'll never find yourself going at the speed of light.
If you are noted and apprehended by a law-enforcement officer, then you can be cited for going through the red light. Your speed at the time is irrelevant.
No - you would be stopped BEFORE you reach the speed of light, by your increasing mass (among other things). As your speed approaches the speed of light, your mass would approach infinity, and it would require an infinite energy to actually achieve the speed of light.Note that the "speed of light" is not really about light. It is a speed limit of our Universe; some have described it as the "speed of causality".
When light travels through a medium speed of light decreases. So we could find out some medium which can stop a light ray.
Stop watch and a light switch
This is an unanswerable question, since time is a dimension and the speed of light a measurement. The two are directly related, however, insofar as approaching the speed of light inversely affects the relative speed with which you travel through time. For instance, one year on a spaceship going 99% the speed of light (it is impossible to reach the speed of light relative to local space-time, in that paradoxical scenario time would stop completely) would cause you to return to an Earth that has aged hundreds or possibly thousands of years (I'm not sure the precise speed to time conversion formula).
Stop spinning the wheels or get the tire speed sensor that is faulty replaced.
A train couldn't go the speed of lightning. At least not with our technology.
So that it can stop the ball from going into the goal.
Rule of thumb. If the light has been green for a while, expect it to change and check your speed. You need to know how much room you have to stop safely. Find a point of no return. Once you cross that point you will have to through the light as long as it is yellow. You should have plenty time between the green light and the red light to stop. The time limit varies with each intersection depending on if the light is set on a timer or if it is on a trip.
We will land in past.when our speed is slower than light there will be some time in clock ,when our speed is same of light than the in click will stop for us, But when our speed is faster than light the clock will start moving reverse.
No. The only thing that affects the passage of time is extreme speed, speeds very near the speed of light.
the light will stop going straight and it might observe the metrial