IMPOSIABLE
You could circle the earth at the equator 261 times, approximately.
North of the arctic circle, or south of the antarctic circle, but only at certain times of the year.
Area of a circle: pi times radius squared Circumference of a circle: 2 times pi times radius or diameter times pi
I suggest you calculate the total distance travelled (use the formula for the circumference of a circle), then divide this result by the time to get the speed.
The circumference of the center circle of a soccer field is pi times its diameter (which is 10 yards). It could also be expressed as 2 times pi times its radius (which is 5 yards). It's about 31.416 yards.
You could circle the earth at the equator 261 times, approximately.
739 times
10 times
3
he never fully circled around the equator of Earth
The moon circles the earth...
The sun is 109 times bigger than the earth. You could lay 109 earths across the sun and it would circle the sun.
It takes about 90 minutes for it to do one orbit of the Earth, so it can go around Earth about 16 times a day.
When farthest from earth it is at apogee.
7 hours.
5.3 times 60 = 318 seconds
55 times.