Yes, and when you reverse the current flow, the north and south pole switch ends.
No curret runs through the Sargasso Sea. The Sargasso Seais a region in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean|North Atlantic Ocean, surrounded by ocean currents. It is bounded on the west by the Gulf Stream; on the north, by the North Atlantic Current; on the east, by the Canary Current; and on the south, by the North Atlantic Equatorial Current. This system of currents forms the North Atlantic Subtropical Gyre.
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The north and south poles of a solenoid change with the direction of electric current passing through the coil. When current flows in one direction, one end becomes the north pole and the other end becomes the south pole. Reversing the direction of current will reverse the polarity of the solenoid.
The "north Atlantic current" is very strong.I really like the "north Atlantic current."The "north Atlantic current" is driven by the global thermohaline circulation (THC), it is wind driven
If you travel north, you are likely to pass through a variety of biomes depending on your starting location. Common biomes you may encounter include temperate forests, grasslands, tundra, and potentially polar ice caps. The specific biomes will depend on the latitude and terrain you traverse.
A solenoid can be used as a compass when a DC current is going through it because when a current is going through the solenoid, the magnetic field lines are nearly uniform and perfectly parallel inside of it, giving it essentially a north pole and south pole.
A wire with a current produces a magnetic field that can interfere with the Earth's magnetic field, causing the compass needle to deviate from pointing north. This is known as electromagnetic interference.
"90 degrees north" is the definition of the north pole. It's a single point which stays right there and does not run, and is not associated with any one specific continent.
The North Atlantic Current is a vast, slow moving warm current. It is created from the Gulf Stream and the Labrador Current joining at southern Greenland, which creates the widening and slowing of the Gulf Stream. The North Atlantic Current splits near western Europe, one part creating the warm Norway Current flowing northward along the coast of Norway and the other creating the cold Canary Current deflecting southward, eventually warming and rejoining the North Equatorial Current.
There are five major currents on Earth: the North Atlantic Current, the South Atlantic Current, the North Pacific Current, the South Pacific Current, and the Antarctic Circumpolar Current.
From Kaesong to Pyongyang (the current capital of North Korea), one would have to go north northwest (NNW).
this is because of magnetic field formed when the current flows through it. this is called electromagnetism. if we move the compass needle away from current carrying conductor or wire it returns to its position (north south position)