Santa has 31 hours of Christmas to work with, thanks to the different
time
zones and the rotation of the earth, assuming he travels east to west
(which seems logical). This works out to 822.6 visits per second. This
is
to say that for each Christian household with good children, Santa has
1.2 milliseconds to park, hop out of the sleigh, jump down the chimney,
fill the stockings, distribute the remaining presents under the tree,
eat
whatever snacks have been left, get back up the chimney, get back into
the sleigh and move on to the next house. Assuming that each of these
91.8 million stops are evenly distributed around the earth (which, of
course, we know to be false but for the purposes of our calculations we
will accept), we are now talking about .78 miles per household, a total
trip of 71.6 million miles, not counting stops to do what most of us
must
do at least once every 31 hours.
This means that Santa's sleigh is moving at appx. 650 miles per second,
3,000 times the speed of sound. For purposes of comparison, the fastest
man-made vehicle on earth, the Ulysses space probe, moves at a mere
27.4 miles per second - a conventional reindeer can run 15 miles per
hour, unless being chased by a pack of wolves.