No, North poles repel each other due to their magnetic properties. Like poles (North-North or South-South) will push away from each other, while opposite poles (North-South or South-North) will attract each other.
North and South (Poles) :)
like poles repel because North to south attract and North to north repel
The place where magnetism is the strongest on a magnet is at the poles, which are located at the ends of the magnet. The magnetic field lines are most concentrated and strongest at the poles compared to other parts of the magnet.
the temperature at the poles are cold due to albedo which is that light substances reflect heat back into the atmosphere
100f
No, Greenland is quite tropical compared to Verkhoyansk and Oymyakon in Siberia. These two places hold the record for the coldest air temperature outside of the Poles
yes, the north and south poles are geographical poles.
No, North poles repel each other due to their magnetic properties. Like poles (North-North or South-South) will push away from each other, while opposite poles (North-South or South-North) will attract each other.
The force of a magnet is strongest at the poles, specifically at the magnetic poles where the magnetic field lines converge. Magnets have a north pole and a south pole, and the force is strongest at these regions.
North and South (Poles) :)
It has 2 Poles the North Pole and the South Pole . Extra Info . : Like Poles repel where as unlike Poles attract .
poles of the same kind repel one another. poles of differet kinds attract, and this is where the saying ' opposites attract' comes from.
like poles repel because North to south attract and North to north repel
North and South poles
No, no barber poles at either the north or south pole.
The place where magnetism is the strongest on a magnet is at the poles, which are located at the ends of the magnet. The magnetic field lines are most concentrated and strongest at the poles compared to other parts of the magnet.