Of course, if your vision is normal. Light always travels at roughly the same speed.
the light, light travels faster than speed :) ami
No, you wouldn't be able to see the stars if you were traveling at the speed of light. Due to the effects of special relativity, time slows down as you approach the speed of light, causing everything outside your perspective to be distorted and appear different.
300000 kps likely refers to 300,000 kilometers per second, which is an extremely high speed that is faster than the speed of light. This speed is not achievable with our current technology or understanding of physics.
Scientists have created a camera that has the ability to take 1012 (That is 1 with 12 zeros) FPS. And with a short enough pulse from a laser, they have the ability to watch the small beam move through space. You can see the research and many videos of this taking place on http://web.media.mit.edu/~raskar//trillionfps/ . This should answer your question thoroughly.
No, according to the theory of relativity, it is impossible for any particle with mass to reach or exceed the speed of light. Accelerators can increase the speed of particles to high fractions of the speed of light, but they cannot exceed it.
the light, light travels faster than speed :) ami
as high as 98.7% of the speed of light
Since light is made of light, whatever speed it goes at is what we call the speed of light. So we'll always see light moving at exactly the speed of light, at least in that particular medium.
you cant see it
It's meant to be, what you see when you approach light, at the speed of light
To see a red light as green, you would have to drive at a speed faster than the speed of light, which is not possible according to the laws of physics.
I'am trying to see if there is a high speed internet provider brownsville CA
The speed of light (and all other forms of electromagnetic radiation) in vacuum is 299,792,458 meters (186,282 miles) per second
time dilates, space contracts, speed of light holds constant.
Answer: No. Reason: You wouldn't even be able to see the car. Why: Because all of the energy in the universe would be needed to get the car up to the speed of light,
No, you wouldn't be able to see the stars if you were traveling at the speed of light. Due to the effects of special relativity, time slows down as you approach the speed of light, causing everything outside your perspective to be distorted and appear different.
Because the speed of light is faster than the speed of sound.