Yes, the given answer is wrong.
Sanity check on your work:
Gravitational force scales as 1/r2. Orbital acceleration scales as ω2r. Set those two equal (ignoring the constants of proportionality) and you have 1/r2 = ω2r. Divide by r and you get 1/r3 = ω2
If we want to multiply ω by 10, that means that ω2 is up by a factor of 100 and r must be down by a factor of the cube root of 100. That's a factor somewhere between 4 and 5. [4 cubed is 64 and 5 cubed is 125]
Geosynchronous orbit is about 40,000 km up from the surface of the earth. Or 46,000 km up from the Earth's center. Divide that by a factor of 4 or 5 and you have 10,000 km up from the center. That matches your answer very nicely.
Sanity check on the given answer:
The given answer is 23 million meters = 23,000 km. That's almost exactly half of the geosynchronous radius of 46,000 km. One might speculate that the question was prepared by someone who figured a retrograde orbit (factor of 8 rather than the correct factor of 10), correctly computed a relationship to the cube of the radius (factor of 8 now down to a factor of 2) and then forgot to take the square root to account for the squared dependence on angular velocity.