Then we would be living in a different, and to us very strange, universe. To allow such a drastic change in the laws of nature would probably require changing many other things, too. Basically, you would have to invent a different universe.
Then we would be living in a different, and to us very strange, universe. To allow such a drastic change in the laws of nature would probably require changing many other things, too. Basically, you would have to invent a different universe.
Then we would be living in a different, and to us very strange, universe. To allow such a drastic change in the laws of nature would probably require changing many other things, too. Basically, you would have to invent a different universe.
Then we would be living in a different, and to us very strange, universe. To allow such a drastic change in the laws of nature would probably require changing many other things, too. Basically, you would have to invent a different universe.
It would turn to energy
If you could travel faster than light, then you could also travel to the past. This is related to the definition of simultaneity, in the Special Theory of Relativity.If you could travel faster than light, then you could also travel to the past. This is related to the definition of simultaneity, in the Special Theory of Relativity.If you could travel faster than light, then you could also travel to the past. This is related to the definition of simultaneity, in the Special Theory of Relativity.If you could travel faster than light, then you could also travel to the past. This is related to the definition of simultaneity, in the Special Theory of Relativity.
sometimes they get pulled over by the light police and given a ticket
No, protons do not travel through an electric circuit at or near the speed of light. In a circuit, electrons are the charge carriers that move through the wires at speeds much slower than the speed of light. Protons typically remain within the nucleus of an atom and do not move freely in a circuit.
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.
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.
It will contiunue to travel until it encounters something that absorbs it, even if that doesn't happen for a billion years. There is no limit to the distance.
If you combine all the colours of light you get WHITE light.
You could try becoming a ray of light.
You can only know what will happen in 2387 if you go there. This requires time traveling. In theory, you may actually be able to time travel by traveling faster than you are right now. The faster you travel, the slower your clock runs, and therefor the clock of everything else will run faster relative to you. If you don't time travel you would have to live to be at least 377 to get to 2387. If you do time travel you could make it there almost instantly (the speed of light being the speed limit). ----OR---- You could be revived in 2387 once you die and then you will know what will happen. ----OR---- You could just guess. I guess a time traveler from 2010 will arrive in 2387. ----OR---- You could ask the doc if you could borrow the DeLorean (If it's still around).
The answer is neither.
Light could travel seven and a half times around the world in one second.