Magnetic poles
No. Mars currently has an axial tilt of 25.2 degrees. Earth's tilt is 23.5 degrees.
yes mars does have ice on its poles it also has water
True. The magnetic poles move constantly.
== == Earth happens to have two North poles, but it is not necessary. * The geographic north pole is one of the two places where the axis of rotation meets the surface. All planets and stars have one geographic north pole and one geographic south pole. * The north magnetic pole is the point where the magnetic field points directly down, and the south magnetic pole is the point where the magnetic field points directly up. Earth happens to have one magnetic north pole and one magnetic south pole at the moment. Mars doesn't have any magnetic poles. Our sun often has dozens of magnetic north and magnetic south poles in or near its sunspots.
Magnetic poles
No. The Northern and Southern lights, called aurora, are the result of Earth's magnetic field funneling high-energy particles from the sun toward the poles. Mars does not have a magnetic field and so does not have aurora.
This is known as magnetic reversal when earth's magnetic poles change places.
No. Mars currently has an axial tilt of 25.2 degrees. Earth's tilt is 23.5 degrees.
alike magnetic poles do not attract because according to the law of magnetism, it is stated that unlike magnetic poles attract and alike poles repel.
True. The magnetic poles move constantly.
yes mars does have ice on its poles it also has water
Mars has a magnetic field.
== == Earth happens to have two North poles, but it is not necessary. * The geographic north pole is one of the two places where the axis of rotation meets the surface. All planets and stars have one geographic north pole and one geographic south pole. * The north magnetic pole is the point where the magnetic field points directly down, and the south magnetic pole is the point where the magnetic field points directly up. Earth happens to have one magnetic north pole and one magnetic south pole at the moment. Mars doesn't have any magnetic poles. Our sun often has dozens of magnetic north and magnetic south poles in or near its sunspots.
The mars axis poles have ice caps, which is frozen water on mars.
Mars and Earth share a similar angle of axial tilt - Mars, at present, has a tilt of 25 degrees, and Earth maintains a fairly constant tilt of 23.5 degrees. However, Mars does not maintain a consistent axial tilt over millions of years, so it is purely coincidence that Mars' current axial tilt is similar to Earth.
The white patches at the poles of Mars are the planet's permanent polar ice caps. Like Earth, Mars has ice at its poles.