Physics-GEEK said:
So what will really happen at the speed of light. How is it possible to say that one cannot know for sure, because in many websites it is written that if one could hypothetically reach c, their time would stop. So what will really happen (hypothetically)?
This is not an analogy, I'm just getting across the idea of asymptotic geometry.
Imagine an airplane on an infinite plane. It cannot turn; it can only ever propel itself due North (its jets are pointed exactly due South).
It is flying North at 500mph, but it is in a 50mph Easterly crosswind.
This deflects its course from due North by some angle.
The plane has an endless supply of fuel and it can accelerate as fast as it needs to go.
How fast does the plane need to propel itself (due North),
in this 50mph crosswind, so that its heading is actually due North?
Would 5000mph do it? No.
It keeps accelerating.
Would 500,000mph do it? No.
50,000,000mph? No.
No matter how fast the plane propels itself, its heading can only ever approach due North asymptotically.
No amount of proplusion in the direction of due North will ever have its actual heading reach due North.
You are asking 'but what if it
could go so fast as to have a heading of due North?'
The answer is: it can't. Full stop.
A long-winded way of saying
The geometry of its environment forbids it.
Spacetime is a different kind of geometry, but the same principle of asymptotes applies.
Simplistically, no object with mass can increase its spacelike trajectory such that its timelike trajectory drops all the way to zero.