rocks with magnetic fields that point south have
A compass is a type of magnet. It interacts with the magnetic fieds in earth so it will point north, northeast, northwest, east, west, south, southeast, and southwest to the correct directions due to the magnetic fields of the earth. A compas rose is an illustration drawn on a map to show the direction of North, South, Northeast, North Northeast, etc., on that map.
One end points to magnetic north and the other end points to the south.
South Korea's highest point is Hallasan, an extinct volcano, which is 1,950 meters (6,398 feet) above sea level.
No, not all pro football fields have a north/south layout. For example, the new multi-billion dollar Texas Stadium lays east to west. There is no rule in the nfl rule book that requires endzones to be on the north/south sides of the field. Most fields have endzones on the north/south sides so the sun doesn't shine in the players' eyes. This becomes a moot point in domed stadiums. Although the football colloquium "a north/south runner" can still be used to refer to players playing on a field that lays east/west. This phrase refers to backs who don't use fancy footwork to gain yardage; rather, they run up the middle of the field with little deviation.
the slaves had to work in the cotton fields
No. I assume you mean a magnetic compass. A magnetic compass reacts to magnetic fields; the magnetic south pole of Earth is not exactly at the geographic north pole, so at some points of the Earth's surface, the magnetic compass will actually point south instead of north. Also, a magnetic compass will be influenced by other magnetic fields, e.g., current-carrying wires.No. I assume you mean a magnetic compass. A magnetic compass reacts to magnetic fields; the magnetic south pole of Earth is not exactly at the geographic north pole, so at some points of the Earth's surface, the magnetic compass will actually point south instead of north. Also, a magnetic compass will be influenced by other magnetic fields, e.g., current-carrying wires.No. I assume you mean a magnetic compass. A magnetic compass reacts to magnetic fields; the magnetic south pole of Earth is not exactly at the geographic north pole, so at some points of the Earth's surface, the magnetic compass will actually point south instead of north. Also, a magnetic compass will be influenced by other magnetic fields, e.g., current-carrying wires.No. I assume you mean a magnetic compass. A magnetic compass reacts to magnetic fields; the magnetic south pole of Earth is not exactly at the geographic north pole, so at some points of the Earth's surface, the magnetic compass will actually point south instead of north. Also, a magnetic compass will be influenced by other magnetic fields, e.g., current-carrying wires.
south pole
In a regular magnetic compass, the needle is a magnet. One end is the south pole and the other end is the north pole. Magnets are affected by other magnets. If a magnet is placed near a magnetic compass, the north pole of the compass's needle is attracted by the south pole of the magnet, and the south pole of the compass's needle is attracted by the north pole of the magnet.
A piece of metal can be magnetized if the atoms of which it is composed are magnetic, and they have aligned their north-south poles to point in the same direction. Heat increases atomic vibration and will cause these atoms to lose their alignment and point in all different directions, so that their atomic magnetic fields will not combine to form one large magnetic field.
The direction of a magnetic field is defined by the direction in which a compass needle will point when placed within that field -that is, from north to south.
No. If you are talking about magnetic compasses, they are aligned with the Earth's magnetic field, which is not exactly north-south (depending where on the Earth you are located). There are, however, special compasses that make use of the Earth's rotation; those will point north-south, regardless of the magnetic field.No. If you are talking about magnetic compasses, they are aligned with the Earth's magnetic field, which is not exactly north-south (depending where on the Earth you are located). There are, however, special compasses that make use of the Earth's rotation; those will point north-south, regardless of the magnetic field.No. If you are talking about magnetic compasses, they are aligned with the Earth's magnetic field, which is not exactly north-south (depending where on the Earth you are located). There are, however, special compasses that make use of the Earth's rotation; those will point north-south, regardless of the magnetic field.No. If you are talking about magnetic compasses, they are aligned with the Earth's magnetic field, which is not exactly north-south (depending where on the Earth you are located). There are, however, special compasses that make use of the Earth's rotation; those will point north-south, regardless of the magnetic field.
A compass does not "consume" energy as such. It just align according to the magnetic field of the Earth. One end will point North and the opposite End will point South. Note that the Geographic North and South are different from the magnetic North and South. A compass as in the simple ones with a metal pin giving direction, will always point to the Magnetic North.
The way a magnet works is they have magnetic Fields from the north and south pole.
The magnetized needle of a compass is attracted to the Earth's own magnetic field which has magnetic poles at the North and South.
Because of the magnetic pull of the north and south pole.
Because of the magnetic pull of the north and south pole.
The magnetic fields between the north poles repel off each other