Get WHERE exactly? It isn't clear at all what experimental setup you are thinking about. Please note that:* Darkness is not a thing in itself; it is merely the absence of light. Darkness doesn't move around.
* There are lots of situations in which there is an apparent movement that is faster than the speed of light; the point is that in none of these cases matter, energy, or information actually gets faster than light, from one place to another.
it depends on how hot it is but if its really hot then it will melt faster in light then dark so maybe
If there is light on them the dark one will heat up faster because the dark one is absorbing light while the silver one is reflecting it away.
The dark surfaces heat up faster because dark surfaces attract sunlight faster than light surfaces.
It depends on how much light is shining on the glass. If there is a lot, then the water in the dark glass will evaporate faster because the temperature will be higher. If there is no light, then it does not matter.
Because dark colors absorb light and light colors reflect light, meaning that they cause the light to go away from the lighter colors.
It rots faster in the light.
it does not. it rots faster in the dark
It rots faster in the light.
it depends on how hot it is but if its really hot then it will melt faster in light then dark so maybe
Light Bruises
Chicken dark or light cooks the fasters
dark
No, this has nothing to do with moving faster than light. It is simply another type of matter - one that is very hard to detect, and that happens to be very common in the Universe.
Dark is the absence of light. Dark is nothing itself other than the absence of light.
in dark, warm, moist places
yes
That doesn't seem likely, given that nothing has been found so far to be faster than the speed of light, and there are certain theoretical reasons to believe that it is not possible. On the other hand, not much is known about dark matter, but it is likely that much of it is slow, i.e., not even near the speed of light.