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If you are standing on the magnetic north pole, the needle will want to point down. If you are standing on the geographical North Pole, the needle will point South. From the North Pole, every direction is "South"!
they're magnetically charged and therefore attracted to the North 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.
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.
The painted end of the compass needle is magnetized. That magnetism is drawn toward the earth's magnetic field, which is to the north.AnswerA compass needle is a tiny magnet, with a north pole and a south pole. These poles are named after the direction in which they point, so the 'painted end' (north) of a compass needle points north because the needle aligns itself with the earth's magnetic field. Magnetic North is the name given to a location, close to True North, whose magnetic polarity is south -which is whyit attracts the north pole of the compass needle.
If you are standing on the magnetic north pole, the needle will want to point down. If you are standing on the geographical North Pole, the needle will point South. From the North Pole, every direction is "South"!
Because of the North and South Poles. They're magnetic and cause the needle to point to them thus showing you what direction you're facing in respect to the both of them
Because of the magnetic pull of the north and south pole.
If you point the north side of the compass away from you the compass will point south. Because the needle always points north (magnetism).
The compass needle will point north-south.
The north pole of a compass needle would still point point towards the north. More precisely, towards the Earth's magnetic south pole, which is close to the geographic north pole.
they're magnetically charged and therefore attracted to the North 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.
a freely suspended magnetic needle as it will always point to the north - south direction
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.
The painted end of the compass needle is magnetized. That magnetism is drawn toward the earth's magnetic field, which is to the north.AnswerA compass needle is a tiny magnet, with a north pole and a south pole. These poles are named after the direction in which they point, so the 'painted end' (north) of a compass needle points north because the needle aligns itself with the earth's magnetic field. Magnetic North is the name given to a location, close to True North, whose magnetic polarity is south -which is whyit attracts the north pole of the compass needle.
The direction of magnetic flux or lines of force is from north polarity to south polarity, and a compass needle will always align with that direction, wherever it is used. Since the magnetic polarity of the location we call Magnetic North is a south, a compass needle will point in that direction.