330.26167 should do it. If you go any faster, you would eventually see the sun set in the east.
The circumference of the Earth at the equator is approximately 40,075 kilometers. The speed of sound at sea level is about 343 meters per second. To calculate the time it would take to travel around the equator at that speed, you would divide the circumference by the speed of sound, resulting in roughly 117 hours, or about 4.9 days.
The Earth's greatest speed of rotation occurs at the equator, where it moves at a speed of about 1670 kilometers per hour (1037 miles per hour) due to the larger circumference at the equator compared to the poles.
you would never get old, but you wouldn't be able to see yourself
It doesn't work that way. For a start, speed doesn't travel. Rather, an object travels at a certain speed.
Assuming a speed of 1670 kilometers per hour (the approximate speed at which Earth rotates at the equator), one full turn around the equator would take approximately 24 hours.
Speed has nothing to do with where you are. You can travel at supersonic speed pretty much anywhere if you have the right vehicle.
They never do.
The rocket launching the satellite from the equator would need to travel at the speed of approximately 1670 km/h due to the Earth's rotational velocity. This speed is necessary to counteract the rotation of the Earth and achieve orbit around the planet.
If you were going fast enough. But if you want too fast I imagine you would see western sunrise again. However at that speed you would run out of fuel quite fast. It would depend upon your latitude and the time of year. For example if you were above the Arctic circle in the summer, any speed would keep you in the light, but in the winter you would always be in the darkness. The farther away you are from the equator the slower you could travel. (Assuming you are traveling parallel to the equator.) The necessary speed at the equator is approximately 1038 MPH.
No, never! it is disproved by Einstein
Neither, mass can never reach the speed of light, this question also contridicts the theory of realativity.
88889 hours I am uncertain but Singapore is about 1 degree north of the equator. It should be possible to reach in less than a day. btw: I have never sailed I am not sure the speed and all that
Actually Einstein postulated that nothing can travel at the speed of light. He theorized that as something approaches the speed of light its mass increases. This means that for something to travel at the speed of light it needs to have an infinite source of energy. The only things that can travel at the speed of light are particles that have no mass, otherwise known as photons.
That depends on where on Earth you are standing. At the poles, the Earth hardly spins at all, but as you travel towards the equator, the rotational speed picks up
He never did. But he was the first pilot to successfully travel faster than the speed of sound in 1947.
its heading strait for us...run!
The Earth's greatest speed of rotation occurs at the equator, where it moves at a speed of about 1670 kilometers per hour (1037 miles per hour) due to the larger circumference at the equator compared to the poles.