If the North Pole keeps melting, it will have an end.
The northern end of Earths axis is the North pole.
The red or pointy end of the needle is really the magnetic north pole, it will always point to the south pole of a bar magnet. Confusion occurs because the geographic north pole is really the earth's magnetic south pole.
No. The North Pole is in the Arctic, the South Pole in the Antarctic- opposite end of the Earth.
North Pole.
The pole marked in red on a magnet is typically the "north pole." In magnetism, every magnet has a north and south pole, with the north pole being the end that seeks the Earth's geographic north when allowed to rotate freely. The opposite end, usually marked in blue or left unmarked, is the south pole.
North Seeking Pole
The northern end of Earths axis is the North pole.
repel
The red or pointy end of the needle is really the magnetic north pole, it will always point to the south pole of a bar magnet. Confusion occurs because the geographic north pole is really the earth's magnetic south pole.
No. The North Pole is in the Arctic, the South Pole in the Antarctic- opposite end of the Earth.
The distance is zero. The north pole is one end of the International Dateline. The south pole is the other end.
North Pole.
you will end at north pole
One end of it is at the north pole. (The other end of it is at the south pole.)
The end of a magnet is called its pole. A magnet has two poles: a north pole and a south pole. These poles are where the magnetic field is strongest and where magnetic forces are generated.
In a round magnet, the poles are located at opposite ends of the magnet. One end will be the North pole and the other end will be the South pole. Magnetic field lines flow from the North pole to the South pole.
The pole marked in red on a magnet is typically the "north pole." In magnetism, every magnet has a north and south pole, with the north pole being the end that seeks the Earth's geographic north when allowed to rotate freely. The opposite end, usually marked in blue or left unmarked, is the south pole.