It would turn to energy
A man can't travel at the speed of light.A man can't travel at the speed of light.A man can't travel at the speed of light.A man can't travel at the speed of light.
Light cannot travel faster than the speed of light, so a bulb traveling at the speed of light is not possible in the laws of physics as we know them. If it were somehow possible, the bulb may emit light, but we cannot definitively predict what would happen under such extreme conditions.
No such thing would happen. Matter cannot reach the speed of light, only massless things can (and they cannot travel at any other speed than the speed of light).
The answer is neither.
You could try becoming a ray of light.
No. Nothing with mass can travel at the speed of light.
Nobody knows for sure. We have never witnessed a physical object traveling faster than the speed of light.
You don't. The only objects that can travel at the speed of light are those that ONLY travel at that speed, like photons or gravitons.
Any massless "thing" like a photon and MAYBE a neutrino. NOTHING with mass can travel at the speed of light. Photons travel at the speed of light. The entire electromagnetic spectrum travels at the speed of light.
Neutrinos do not travel at the speed of light, but they do move very close to the speed of light.
Dark does not exist, it is only the absence of light. Darkness is not an entity, so it does not travel and has no speed. In principle, a shadow or nonentity could "travel" faster than the speed of light. For example, if you pivoted a powerful laser a few degrees the point of light would travel across a screen very far away at a "speed" greater than light. Note that this is not at all faster than light motion. You could achieve a similar effect by casting shadows on things very far away. But none of this is actually a "speed."
No, it is not possible to travel at the speed of light in water. Light travels at a slower speed in water compared to its speed in a vacuum, which is about 299,792 kilometers per second. The speed of light in water is approximately 225,000 kilometers per second.