If going along the circumpolar route, and at zero(!) altitude, it would take 23 hours, 56 minutes and 59.7 seconds - or 23 hours 57 minutes. The equatorial route, again at zero altitude, would take approx 2 minutes longer.
You can fly continuously south around the world following a great circle route. You would eventually reach the point where south and north meet at the South Pole, completing a full circle. The distance would depend on the starting point and the specific flight path taken.
In theory, any plane can fly around the world in an hour, regardless of size or speed. It depends on your definition of 'around the world'. No existing plane can do this at the equator. But any plane can fly along a line of latitude that has the same full length as the distance the plane can fly in one hour. The faster the plane, the farther from the poles its lines of latitude will be.
As long as I know, he didn't fly to space
Another name for the "Crane fly" is the "Daddy long legs"
If you were travelling faster than the speed of light then yes, but if you were not travelling at light speed you would not. Travelling at light speed can take you around the world 7 times a second.
4 days
48 hours
You can do it in under 24 hours
Around the world in 81 days
a can of wallpaper.
29hours and 59mins
a can of wallpaper.
3
1 day
Lt Smith and Huggs were the first to fly around the world.
Lt Smith and Huggs were the first to fly around the world.
To be the first woman to fly around the world in an aircraft