114,155
I would think that it would be 24 like we have today!
depends on how fast you drive....if you drive an average speed of 60mph it would be around 4 hours
It is important because if you didn't, you would be measuring 12 hours instead of the full 24. I think...
Divide 223 minutes by 60 minutes per hour. 223/60 = 3 hours and 43 minutes. This is an example where you would use remainder instead of a decimal for left overs.
If a day had 18 hours instead of 24 hours, there would still be 24 time zones around the world. Each time zone would cover 15 degrees of longitude, just like in the current 24-hour system.
If you are asking "how long would it take to fly around the world?", then it would of taken 22 hours in concord, but the world record is held by Steve Fossett, he did it in 67 hours in the Global Flyer.
An average nonstop flight around the world would take around 34 hours if the plane was going around 500 mph.
At the equator you would have to be travelling at about 2,083 miles per hour.
17, 607, 600
The cruising speed of the Concorde was mach 2.04, or about 1552 miles per hour. Assuming that you are referring to a non-stop flight around the equator, it would take a Concorde about 16 hours to fly around the world at that speed, ignoring weather, actual range, and the rotation of the Earth.
MercuryIn this solar system, that would be Mercury at about 88 Earth days. There have been planets discovered around other stars which blaze around their suns in a matter of hours instead of days.
The average hours a botanist would work would be around 12-15 hours a day.
World circumference is 40,000 km, so it would take 4000 hours
Going along the equator at an altitude of zero, it would take approx 19.9 hours.
Would you want to sit around and think of this answer for hours and hours?
Around 6 hours a day