For example the south pole and the south geographic pole are located at the bottom and they are aligned. that's how they are the same plus they are both poles.
There you go for whoever asked and whoever needs. It was nice sharing with you and your welcome
A compass is still useful for determining direction because it points towards the magnetic north pole, providing a consistent reference point that helps in navigation. Even though the magnetic north pole and geographic north pole are not aligned, the difference can be accounted for using magnetic declination adjustments.
The North Pole of a compass magnet points toward the Earth's magnetic South Pole. This is because magnetic poles are opposites, and the North Pole of a magnet is attracted to the magnetic field generated by the Earth's core, which is located near the geographic North Pole. This phenomenon is a result of the Earth's magnetic field, which is not aligned perfectly with the planet's rotational axis.
The geographic poles are defined by the Earth's rotation, located at 90 degrees north (North Pole) and 90 degrees south (South Pole). In contrast, the magnetic poles are determined by the Earth's magnetic field and are not fixed; their positions shift over time due to changes in the Earth's core. Currently, the North Magnetic Pole is located in the Arctic region, moving towards Russia, while the South Magnetic Pole is near the coast of Antarctica. This divergence means that the geographic and magnetic poles are not aligned and can vary significantly in distance from one another.
Magnetic north pole is where your compass will point. Geographic North pole is at the "top" of the globe. If you put a pole straigh thru the earth from the north pole to the south it would be a straigh line.Magnetic north and south poles can and do move because the eath's magnetic field flucuates.The geographical or 'true'' north pole is the point where the Earth's axis line touches the Earth's northernmost surface. That is somewhere in the (northern) Arctic Ocean.The location of the magnetic north (and south) pole 'travel around' over time. Today the magnetic south pole - strange as it may sound - is located in the north of Canada, the magnetic north pole in southern Antarctica.
North and south are considered opposite directions because they represent the two poles of Earth's magnetic and geographic orientation. The Earth’s magnetic field has a north magnetic pole and a south magnetic pole, which are aligned with the planet’s geographic poles. This dichotomy is fundamental to navigation, where north typically indicates the direction toward the North Pole, while south leads towards the South Pole. As a result, they are used to define the cardinal directions on a compass, making them inherently oppositional.
A compass is still useful for determining direction because it points towards the magnetic north pole, providing a consistent reference point that helps in navigation. Even though the magnetic north pole and geographic north pole are not aligned, the difference can be accounted for using magnetic declination adjustments.
The Earth's geographic north pole is actually a magnetic south pole because the Earth's magnetic field is generated by the movement of molten iron in its outer core. This movement creates a magnetic field that aligns with the geographic north pole, causing it to act as a magnetic south pole.
Earth's magnetic axis is tilted at an angle of approximately 11 degrees from its geographic axis. This means that the magnetic north pole is not exactly aligned with the geographic north pole. The tilt causes compass needles to point slightly off from true north in certain locations.
The compass needle aligns to the Earth's magnetic field. This magnetic field is not exactly aligned with the Earth's rotation, but the magnetic south pole is close enough to the geographic north pole for the compass to be useful in most places.
The North Pole of a compass magnet points toward the Earth's magnetic South Pole. This is because magnetic poles are opposites, and the North Pole of a magnet is attracted to the magnetic field generated by the Earth's core, which is located near the geographic North Pole. This phenomenon is a result of the Earth's magnetic field, which is not aligned perfectly with the planet's rotational axis.
The geographic poles are defined by the Earth's rotation, located at 90 degrees north (North Pole) and 90 degrees south (South Pole). In contrast, the magnetic poles are determined by the Earth's magnetic field and are not fixed; their positions shift over time due to changes in the Earth's core. Currently, the North Magnetic Pole is located in the Arctic region, moving towards Russia, while the South Magnetic Pole is near the coast of Antarctica. This divergence means that the geographic and magnetic poles are not aligned and can vary significantly in distance from one another.
Only the magnetic poles wanderD.Earth's magnetic and geographic poles are generally not in the same place.Geographic poles are defined by Earth's rotation.
A compass needle points towards the Earth's magnetic north pole, which is located near the geographic north pole but not exactly aligned with it. This allows the needle to indicate the direction of magnetic north, aiding in navigation.
The south pole of a magnetic compass is pulled towards the Earth's north magnetic pole, and away from Earth's south magnetic pole. Or towards and away the corresponding poles of any other magnet. Note that Earth's NORTH magnetic pole is close to the SOUTH pole.
Magnetic north pole is where your compass will point. Geographic North pole is at the "top" of the globe. If you put a pole straigh thru the earth from the north pole to the south it would be a straigh line.Magnetic north and south poles can and do move because the eath's magnetic field flucuates.The geographical or 'true'' north pole is the point where the Earth's axis line touches the Earth's northernmost surface. That is somewhere in the (northern) Arctic Ocean.The location of the magnetic north (and south) pole 'travel around' over time. Today the magnetic south pole - strange as it may sound - is located in the north of Canada, the magnetic north pole in southern Antarctica.
North and south are considered opposite directions because they represent the two poles of Earth's magnetic and geographic orientation. The Earth’s magnetic field has a north magnetic pole and a south magnetic pole, which are aligned with the planet’s geographic poles. This dichotomy is fundamental to navigation, where north typically indicates the direction toward the North Pole, while south leads towards the South Pole. As a result, they are used to define the cardinal directions on a compass, making them inherently oppositional.
The Geographic Poles are fixed at the earth's axis of rotation. The Magnetic Poles are located within a few hundred kilometres, but wander. The magnetic polarity of Magnetic North (the location) is south, which is why it attracts the north pole of a compass needle.