No.
Light.
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).
Because when moving at the speed of light, time stops for you and you can no longer measure speed (distance covered in a certain time).
The speed of knowledge/information travels faster than the speed of light.
Light is faster than time. In a vacuum, light travels at a constant speed of approximately 186,282 miles per second, while time is a concept that provides a framework for the sequence of events.
In a vacuum, light travels at a constat speed. It won't get faster or slower over time. In other substances (e.g., in water) light moves at a speed determined by the characteristics of the substance. Here, it won't get slower or faster with time, either.
Travelling faster than the speed of light is not possible, therefore no galaxies have travelled or are travelling faster than the speed of light.
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.
time dilates, space contracts, speed of light holds constant.
Light is faster because speed does not move. Speed is a measure of the rate of movement but, in itself, it does not move - at all!
Nothing travels faster then the speed of light (according to our understanding of physics)
* The speed of light in a vacuum, * The speed of sound,