I believe it is just called the South end.
One end of any bar magnet will always point north. This end is called the north-seeking pole.
A bar magnet is a magnet of rectangular shape with a north and and south end, which are sometimes coloured different colours to indicate which end is which.
The blue end.
Assuming that you know what a magnet is,t is a magnet shaped like a bar. it is like a rectangle, like the shape of snickers. One end of the bar is the North Pole and one end of the bar is the South pole. If you do not know what a magnet is, it is basically a piece of alnico , ferrite or some other material that produces a magnetic field because its atoms are 'in order'. Permanent magnets are subjected to special processing in a powerful magnetic field during manufacture to align their internal microcrystalline structure.
Those are called the poles of the magnet.
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.
The "south pole" of a magnet is usually marked with blue, while the "north pole" is marked with red.
A piece of any magnetic material, like iron or steel (a nail, knitting needle, bolt etc.) is take and placed on a bench or a table. A bar magnet is brought close to the magnetic material (say an iron piece AB). One end of the bar magnet is stroked against it, moving from end A to end B of the iron piece. When the bar reached end B, it is lifted and the stroke is repeated from A to end B. This procedure is repeated several times, keeping two things in mind: (a) The same pole of the bar magnet should be used every time (b) Strokes should be in the same direction By stroking the iron piece with the north pole of the bar magnet, end A becomes the North Pole, and end B the South Pole. If you bring the South Pole of any magnet close to end A now, what will you observe? You will observe that the two attract, which simply proves that end A acquires the North Pole.
If you roughly know where North is, tie the bar magnet to a piece of thin string so it balances horizontally and let it dangle. Once it stops spinning and waving about, one end should point North. Mark this end as with an N for north.
well it depends on the kind of magnet you have if it is the bar one with a south and north end then put it in a puddle or a boal of water and the north end should point north.
The ends of a magnet are called the poles.
If, by 'south magnetic pole', you means 'Magnetic South', then the answer is the magnet's south pole. On the other hand, if you are referring to a south magnetic polairty, then the answer is the magnet's north pole.