Didn't your avatar just change from a cherry to WonderWoman again?
We have to be quick to keep up with you, never mind the sun!
2007-05-16 07:37:05
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Somewhere between 14-18,000 miles per hour if you're trying to beat the sun on the surface of the planet, i think.
2007-05-16 06:56:19
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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LOL have a famous guy or woman for making me snort this evening!!! i don't understand??? perhaps you could answer my question if all people stood in a similar direction and began working real quickly ought to we make the earth spin in yet another direction... LOL i understand we are loopy teenagers you & I lol
2016-11-23 17:54:22
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answer #3
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answered by headlee 4
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Not fast at all.. you just spend six months in the arctic, and the next six months in the antarctic - because of the tilt in the axis of the earth, these regions spend six months without night.. you would only have to move once every six months
2007-05-16 06:46:40
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answer #4
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answered by Richard W 4
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You would have to travel at the same speed the world revolves and in the opposite direction.
The orbital speeds are as follows:
Avg. orbital speed: 29.783 km/s
(107,218 km/h)
Max. orbital speed: 30.287 km/s
(109,033 km/h)
Min. orbital speed: 29.291 km/s
(105,448 km/h)
Alternatively travel to the North or South pole - depending which is leaning to the sun. Here you will have 24 hours daylight!
Incidentally if you take one step away from the poles it takes only a matter of seconds to travel around the world (in a line of latitude)
2007-05-16 06:46:38
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answer #5
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answered by nettyone2003 6
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Pretty fast, but you may want to keep a YAHOO ANSWERS TOTE BAG handy. You never know what might be inside it, or if you come across something you want to keep.
2007-05-16 06:46:29
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answer #6
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answered by gene_harden2000 3
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Not as fast as you might think. You could do it on an airplane. Just keep flying west!!
2007-05-16 13:00:17
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answer #7
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answered by chris j 7
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1,080 mph if you were on the Equator but remember if you live within the Arctic Circle they have 6 months of daylight per year.
2007-05-16 06:46:52
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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I don't mind the dark, that is a good question though. :) I am sorry to say that I don't have the brain energy to think it through today though.
2007-05-16 06:45:57
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answer #9
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answered by missjax72 4
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Well it depends.. there's the logical scientific asnwer.. and then there's the redneck answer.. just buy yer self a tanning bed or one of them fandangly UV lights and you dun have to go nowhere! lol... ok.. corny.. I know..
2007-05-16 06:45:29
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answer #10
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answered by Miss T 4
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