No. You must use a compass to detect it. It's not a candy-striped pole with a sign that says "north pole" with icicles hanging from it. That is something you'd see in a cartoon, not in real life.
The north pole does not have a capital because it is not a country. Actually, if you look at a map, you will see that there is no land at the north pole.
RIght up around the pole - no.
To see both the north celestial pole and the south celestial pole at the same time a person would need to standing at the equator. The atmospheric haze may interfere near the horizon may obstruct the view.
At the North Pole, and at the South Pole.
No.
Yes, if you use a compass you you will see it points towards the north pole. Although the north pole is called the North pole, scientifically it is actually the south pole. This is because the Earth\'s magnetic field makes a compass point to the scientific south pole, geographically known as the North Pole
Yes. For any point on Earth that is north of the equator, the north celestial pole is above the horizon.
Weather.com shows accurate temperatures and weather for the North Pole. See the related link.
santa clause
Yes, you can
In the north, you can see aurora borealis and in the south you can see aurora australis.
You can't see any continent from the North Pole with the naked eye. It is in the middle of the Arctic Ocean far from Europe, Asia or North America. But technically if you had a very good telescope, you could see the very northern points of those three continents perhaps.