Although your question wasn't very clear in the sense that I'm not sure 0.1 WHAT it is over light speed, I can tell you what Warp 10 is equivelant to. The object is traveling 10 times faster than the speed of light. To determine the actual speed in Miles per hour, use the equation s=w•669600000 where s represents the speed in Mph and w represents the warp the ship or object is traveling at. So if your ship was traveling at Warp 10 your ship would be traveling at 6690000000 miles per hour which written out is Six billion, six hundred and ninety million miles per hour. This equation will still hold true even if the warp is not a whole number. For example, the ship could be traveling at Warp 7.8 and the equation would still work out correctly.
Asker:
Thanks for the answer, but that was not what I was looking for. To answer this question you need to see BOTH Star Trek and star wars. Thanks.
Yes. If I saw you move past me at the speed of light, and at the same time, you were measuring the speed of light with instruments that you were carrying, you would measure the same speed of light that everybody always does, regardless of whatever speed you were zooming past me. And as you passed by a star or a street light, you would cast just as good a shadow as you ever did. Physics 101, Introduction to Relativity. Wierd stuff.
Warp speed is faster than the speed of Light. Warp 1 is the speed of light and warp 2 is 10X the warp 3 is 27X and it increases by a power of 3 for every level. At warp 5 for example you could make to the closest star Proxima Centauri 4.22 lights years away. It would take hours instead of years to get there, but the power needed to generate that kind of speed would be enormous. Warp is so fast that objects come to you through a distress in space. For generating this we would have to concentrate energy so vast to distort space time. Also known as wormhole movement explained by Einstein's law of relativity.
The speed of light is always the same, as long as the light stays in vacuum or in the material substance it's in. The speed of the source generating the light, or the speed of the person who's measuring the light, has no effect on the light's speed. It will always measure the same number. That means: -- If a rocket is in space, flying toward you at half the speed of light, and the astronaut aboard shines a flashlight at you, and -- If you strap a jet-pack on your back and fly toward the rocket at half the speed of light, and -- If you measure the speed of the light from his flashlight as it shines past you, -- You'll measure the same speed of light as if you and the astronaut were both standing still. It can't be . . . But it is. It's been confirmed in thousands of experiments during the past 100 years.
The speed of light in vacuum is the same everywhere.
ANY light traveling through the same medium (stuff) has the same speed.
All electromagnetic waves travel at the same speed in a vacuum -- the speed of light.
No. Not even one thousandth of the speed of light.
In a vacuum the speed of red and blue light are the same as all light, 300,000,000m/s. Their frequency and wavelength will be different but the speed remains the same.
Approximately the same as the speed of light.
Gamma radiation is the fastest, as it is light. speed of gamma radiation = c (light speed) speed of beta radiation < c ( below light speed ) speed of alpha radiation < c/10 ( far below light speed )
They travel at the speed of light (c = 3*108 m/s)
No, light in a medium will travel at a slower speed.