The geographic poles move hardly at all ... fractions of a millimeter in response to
drastic geological events, such as extreme earthquakes.
The Earth's magnetic poles can move hundreds of meters in the span of a year.
actually the north pole of our earth(considering it as a big bar magnet) is the geographic south pole.Its called so because it lies on the northern hemisphere.Actually it is the south pole of our big bar magnetAdditional AnswerThe north magnetic pole of a compass needle points to Magnetic North. "Magnetic North" is so-called to differentiate it from "True North", and has nothing whatsoever to do with its magnetic polarity. Actually, the magnetic polarity of Magnetic North is a south pole which, because unlike poles attract, attracts the north pole of the compass needle.
Here are a series of truths which answer the question: 1) A magnet, any magnet, always consists of a north pole and a south pole. 2) Opposite poles attract each other, same poles repulse each other. 3) A compass needle is a tiny magnet 4) The earth itself can be seen as one big magnet, with its magnetic south pole there at the geographical north pole Thus, the 'north pole' of you compass needle is attracted to the south pole of the planet. Which is the geographical north pole. (Here are a few disclaimers: Firstly, Geographical north and Magnetical south don't perfectly align, but its close. Some compasses even include a correcting factor. Secondly, the earth has no magnet inside it as most people know magnets. Instead, the earths core produces a magnetic field in a different way, but the end result is the same as if the planet had one big magnet inside it.)
the vertical plane passing through magnetic axis is magnetic meridain and the vertical plane passing through geographical axis in geographical meridain.the intersting fact is they are not parallel...but remain at certain angle ..the maximum angle made is 17 degree
North pole. The north pole of a compass needle has "S" on it, and the south pole of the needle has "N" on it. Opposites attract, similar poles repel.
Two poles of the same kind repel each other; a north pole and a south pole attract each other.Two poles of the same kind repel each other; a north pole and a south pole attract each other.Two poles of the same kind repel each other; a north pole and a south pole attract each other.Two poles of the same kind repel each other; a north pole and a south pole attract each other.
magnet has two poles..one is north pole n the other is south pole. the earth also has a magnet within it which has a dierction opposite to the direction of the geographical poles.i.e. the geographical north of earth is its magnetic south and vice versa. If a bar magnet is suspended freely , its one end is attracted to the magnetic north which is geographical south of earth n therefore that end of the magnet is called south pole.and the other end is called north pole.
north pole and south pole attract + south pole and north pole attract because opposites attract. two magnets repel each other when the same poles are pulling together. for example, north pole + north pole repel because they are the same.
The Earth's magnetic poles do in-fact 'wander' over the years. Estimates put the movement of the North Pole at 34-37 miles (55 and 60 kilometres) per year. The magnetic poles are not always directly opposite each other. There is a good article on Wikipedia with more information - search for 'north magnetic pole'.
The Earth's magnetic poles do in-fact 'wander' over the years. Estimates put the movement of the North Pole at 34-37 miles (55 and 60 kilometres) per year. The magnetic poles are not always directly opposite each other. There is a good article on Wikipedia with more information - search for 'north magnetic pole'.
No, being a magnet, it has a north pole and a south pole. The two can't be separated in a magnet. If you cut the magnet in half, each half will still have a north pole and a half pole.No, being a magnet, it has a north pole and a south pole. The two can't be separated in a magnet. If you cut the magnet in half, each half will still have a north pole and a half pole.No, being a magnet, it has a north pole and a south pole. The two can't be separated in a magnet. If you cut the magnet in half, each half will still have a north pole and a half pole.No, being a magnet, it has a north pole and a south pole. The two can't be separated in a magnet. If you cut the magnet in half, each half will still have a north pole and a half pole.
No. The magnetic pole wanders quite a bit - even towards the south rotational pole at times.
Your answer depends on what you're describing. Generally, in geography, the word pole indicates an extreme: the pole of inaccessibility, for example.Geographically, the North Pole and the South Pole mark positions on Earth that are farthest away from the Equator. Each is expressed in degrees of latitude -- 90 -- and followed by the notation that indicates on which side of the Equator you can find the pole -- N or S.