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your velocity = c
your vehicle a super fast spacecar
you weight nothing in space

2006-09-11 05:56:58 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Cars & Transportation Other - Cars & Transportation

E=MC^2

According to einstein everything travelling at that speed turns to energy...
Energy= mass travelling at the speed of light.

2006-09-11 06:22:14 · update #1

9 answers

YOU'LL SEE ME FLIP YOU THE BIRD CUZ YOU'RE DRIVING TOO FRIGGIN FAST!

2006-09-11 06:06:37 · answer #1 · answered by STEWIE 6 · 1 2

You'll see your headlights come on and the light thereof will be speeding away from the source at the speed of light. Light always travels away form the observer at the same speed no matter the speed of that observer. Of course the car that can go that fast has yet to be made and the G force would kill the driver before he had the chance to observe any of it!

2006-09-11 08:24:25 · answer #2 · answered by scarlettt_ohara 6 · 0 0

Hi, that sounds like a question we will get in high school physics class. If my memory is correct, according to Einstein, everything at the light speed will behave differently than in the usual circumstances. Maybe you will not be able to see anything. Are you testing the general audience, or are you curious about the science?

2006-09-11 06:01:47 · answer #3 · answered by yabst@yahoo.com 2 · 0 0

What ever there is to see. The speed of light is strange, and set at 299,792,458 m / s. If you are driving at 60 mph, and turn on your head lights, the beam is going out at that speed, not that speed plus sixty. So, if you could get to that seemingly absolute speed limit of the universe, and turn on your lights, they would work.

2006-09-11 06:11:14 · answer #4 · answered by oklatom 7 · 1 0

it would take a real physics junky to answer this - my guess is
that, travelling at c you would notice no difference at all in anything - you would be in a time zone where time was at a standstill compared to your space station, but your clocks would tick normally onboard, and the light you shone out ahead would shine on things quite normally - to you - you would have no idea that your dimensions - for example, your spaceship was 30 feet long is now a straight line up and down that a stationary obsever would not even see at all... you would be oblivious to any changes in anything.... all laws of physics would be preserved - for you ...

2006-09-11 06:09:43 · answer #5 · answered by robertta g 2 · 0 0

I wanna know what car travels that fast because I want it! haha I could get to work a lot faster! Not to mention any other place I would want to go...maybe Vegas or New York! =)

2006-09-11 06:11:26 · answer #6 · answered by dreamingangelu 2 · 0 0

You wouldn't see the light because your frame of reference is moving at the same velocity.

2006-09-11 06:10:42 · answer #7 · answered by NordicGuru 3 · 0 0

You wouldn't see anything. If you are moving as fast as light, then the light can't get ahead of you to illuminate anything.

2006-09-11 05:59:38 · answer #8 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

You'd see whatever is visible without the benefit of additional lighting.

2006-09-11 06:02:30 · answer #9 · answered by Bostonian In MO 7 · 0 0

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