The speed of light contains distance and time, it compares how far a photon goes in a unit of time.
If I understand you correctly, you are looking to compare such a relationship to time once again. Like a hypothetical spaceship traveling faster than the speed of light. If it travels one light year in a day instead of a year, that would be a light-year per day, or say, 365 lights.
At the speed of light, time does not exist as we understand it. According to Einstein's theory of relativity, time slows down as an object approaches the speed of light, eventually coming to a stop at the speed of light. This means that for light itself, time does not pass.
Time does not stop at the speed of light; rather, time appears to slow down for an object moving at the speed of light relative to an observer.
Time and space are related by the speed of light space r=ct where t is time and c is the speed of light.
Perhaps coincidentally, the phrase "light speed" refers to a speed.It is a speed.
Neither light nor time normally has any influence on speed.
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).
No.
No, the speed of light has remained constant over time according to current scientific understanding.
By definition, light travels at the speed of light. About 300,000 kps
Because visible light is emitted at a known frequency (a time) and then it is as simple as Speed = Distance / Time therefore Distance = Speed x Time.
Light always travels at the speed of light. The only time that's 299,792,458 meters per second ( " c " ) is when it's traveling in vacuum.
The formula to calculate travel time at the speed of light is distance divided by the speed of light. The nearest star to Earth is Proxima Centauri, which is about 4.24 light-years away. Therefore, the travel time to Proxima Centauri at the speed of light would be 4.24 years.