Poles
A freely suspended magnet aligns itself in the north-south direction because of Earth's magnetic field. The magnet's north pole is attracted to the Earth's magnetic south pole, causing it to point north. This behavior is due to the magnet's ability to align with the direction of the magnetic field lines present in the Earth's magnetic field.
If you hang a magnet on a piece of string, the magnet will align itself in the magnetic field of the Earth and point in a north-south direction. This is because the magnet is trying to align with the Earth's magnetic field.
A magnet with distinct north and south poles is called a "bar magnet." This type of magnet generates a magnetic field that has a direction, indicated by the orientation of its poles. The north pole of the magnet is attracted to the Earth's magnetic north, while the south pole is attracted to the Earth's magnetic south.
The south pole of a magnet is typically determined by observing its attraction or repulsion to the north pole of another magnet. The Earth's magnetic field can also help identify the south pole of a magnet, as the north-seeking pole of a compass needle will point towards the Earth's magnetic south pole.
magnet which we get naturally from earth is called natural magnet e.g: lodestone.. while magnet made from magnetic material is called artificial magnet ...
The natural magnet is present at the core of our planet earth.
Not a magnet, no. But it does attract the Earth and this is due to gravity.
A freely suspended magnet aligns itself in the north-south direction because of Earth's magnetic field. The magnet's north pole is attracted to the Earth's magnetic south pole, causing it to point north. This behavior is due to the magnet's ability to align with the direction of the magnetic field lines present in the Earth's magnetic field.
Iron
A magnet produced in earth; not man made.
The biggest magnet on Earth is the Earth itself. Earth's magnetic field is generated by the movement of molten iron in its outer core, creating a magnetic field that extends into space and interacts with the solar wind to form the magnetosphere.
a large bar magnet which has itz north pole n south pole opposite.........
Its an electro-magnet - currents flowing through the iron core.
The Earth is not a magnet. Its magnetic field is generated by electrical currents generated in the interior; or rather by the net sum of a number of separate electrical current processes. Nor is the strength or direction of the magnetic field fixed; it varies with time, and is well known to have reversed in polarity many times. The 'axis' of the Earth's magnetic field is not coincident with the spin axis - it is biased well off to one side.
Earth attracts a magnet because both Earth and the magnet have mass. The force of gravity acts between any objects that have mass.
Earth
yes