330 m/s
It moves at a slower speed!
matter waves as waves travel faster.. however you must know that we assume this condition to balance the Kinetic energy and energy of a photon according to plank's quantum theory and have no experimental proof about it :)
when the particle moves with the speed of light,the mass of the particle increases to infinity.... this is as per Einstein's theory of relativity....n its true.... some people say the mass decreases to zero when the particle travels with the speed of light....they are "INSANE"
No, matter does not turn into light when achieving the speed of light. As an object with mass accelerates towards the speed of light, its energy increases, but it does not transform into light. It would require an infinite amount of energy to accelerate an object with mass to the speed of light.
When light with wavelength of 589 nanometers moves through water at the temperature of 20° C, its speed is 75% of the speed of light in vacuum.
There is no single answer. Electromagnetic energy moves at the speed of light, about 300,000 km/sec. Acoustic energy moves at the speed of sound in whatever medium you are using. Kinetic energy moves with the speed of the moving body. Thermal energy moves through a conducting body at various speeds, depending on how well the material conducts heat. So energy as a general term does not have a specific speed.
Speed is how fast something moves. Light is a form of energy carried by massless photons, these photons move at the speed of light, which is the fastest speed that anything in the universe can travel.
Light energy moves as waves are called electromagnetic waves. These waves are characterized by their amplitude, wavelength, and frequency, and can travel through a vacuum at the speed of light.
It means the speed at which light moves. While it may seem that light advances instantaneously, in fact it does not - it moves at a speed of 300,000 kilometers per second. That's the speed in a vacuum; in other substances, it moves slower. For example, in glass or water it moves at about 2/3 of the speed it has in a vacuum.
Some kinds of waves move at the speed of light - notably light itself, and other electromagnetic waves.
you do not; it would take way too much energy to do this because your mass is so great. Small subatomic particles can be accelerated to close to he speed of light and they require a lot of energy from a particle accelerator. Nothing can reach the speed of light as it would take an infinite amount of energy
It moves at a slower speed!
The speed of light is a constant, so the acceleration is zero. However, light IS affected by gravity, and gravity causes an acceleration. How does this balance? The light moves at the same speed - the speed of light, abbreviated "c" - but loses or gains energy as the light moves toward or away from the gravity source. In gaining energy (without speeding up!) the frequency of the light is increased and the wavelength of the light (or any electromagnetic energy) is decreased, In losing energy, the wavelength is increased and the wavelength decreased. This could be a trick question, of course. Light from a star wouldn't be travelling from earth, unless we are talking about reflected light, which would not be particularly intense, but it is not out of the question.
An object that normally doesn't move at light speed (so, this doesn't include photons for example) CANNOT move at the speed of light. As it approaches the speed of light, its mass will get higher and higher (and tend towards infinity); as will the energy required to continue speeding it up.
The speed increases.
Light energy moves from one place to another through electromagnetic waves that travel at the speed of light. These waves can travel through various mediums, such as air, water, or glass, and can be reflected, refracted, or absorbed along the way.
Yes, a photon moves at the speed of light, because photons have no mass.