No, they move slowly. The North Magnetic Pole, for example, is currently drifting a little west of north at about 40 km/year.
This is known as magnetic reversal when earth's magnetic poles change places.
Magnetic Reversal
No, Earth's magnetic poles are not located exactly on its geographical poles. The magnetic poles are located slightly off-axis and can shift over time due to changes in the Earth's magnetic field.
2
every 250,000 years :)
every 250,000 years :)
No, it is not true. The magnetic poles may be influenced by Earth's rotation, but they are certainly not defined by it.
The strength of Earth's magnetic field is strongest at the magnetic poles, which are not necessarily aligned with the geographic poles. The magnetic field is weakest at the magnetic equator.
Only the magnetic poles wanderD.Earth's magnetic and geographic poles are generally not in the same place.Geographic poles are defined by Earth's rotation.
Because the earths magnetic poles move around from year to year, and even day to day.
The angle varies between 22.1 & 24.5
The Earth's magnetic field is strongest at the North and South magnetic poles, which are not the same as the geographic North and South poles. The magnetic field strength varies at different locations on the Earth's surface.