Apparently not. When I turn my flashlight on and shine it at the wall across the
room, the light from the flashlight crosses the room at the speed of light, and it
makes this big fuzzy spot on the opposite wall. It not only gets there right now
and not in the future, but some of it bounces off the wall and back to me so that
I can see the wall, and that also happens right now and not in the future.
The future tense for speed is will speed.
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".
Due to, because of, and pursuant to the speed of light, it may be stated with a high order of confidence that any given parcel of light located here at this very moment will be elsewhere in the future.
so Im just going to straight up say use google but also I'm going to say the speed of sound is faster than the speed of light and magnetism is was slower.
Fortunately, you'll never need to deal with that problem, since you'll never find yourself going at the speed of light.
When we discuss moving faster than the speed of light, we are really talking... The speed of a shadow is therefor not restricted to be less than the speed...
I will never manage.If someone else manages to accelerate something tangible to the speed of light it will be far in the future.
Since no object with mass can reach the speed of light -- such an object can only approach that speed -- the question is meaningless.
The future tense of "speed" is "will speed" or "will be speeding."
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.
The part about the spaceship going with the speed of light is not real. I don't understand the earlier part of the question.
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.