Yes, electromagnets have a distinct north and south pole, just like permanent magnets.
No, the North Pole and South Pole are not the same. The North Pole is located at the top of the Earth, while the South Pole is at the bottom. They are opposite ends of the Earth's axis.
The north pole of a magnet is attracted to the Earth's geographical North Pole, and the south pole is attracted to the Earth's geographical South Pole. You can also use a compass to find the north and south poles of a magnet - the needle will align with the north pole of the magnet.
No, the magnetic north pole is not located in the south. It is located in the Arctic region, near the geographic North Pole.
a pole
Magnetic field lines point from the south pole to the north pole of a magnet.
No. magnets always have two poles, (even electromagnets). Designated North and South.
It takes about 12,450.5 miles from the north pole to the south pole or south pole to north pole.
The North Pole is at 90 North & the South Pole is at 90 South.
The latitude at the north pole is 90° North. Thg elatitude at the south pole is 90° South.
Electromagnets are just as "real" as permanent magnets and behave in exactly the same way (as long as there's current flowing through them). So, yes: the north pole of a permanent magnet will attract the south pole, and repel the north pole, of an electromagnet.
the arctic is the north pole antarctica is the south pole :)
The North pole of a magnet or Earth attracts the South pole, while repelling the North pole. The South pole attracts the North pole and repels the South pole. For Earth, the North magnetic pole is located near the geographic North pole, and the South magnetic pole is near the geographic South 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.
There are 180°s from the North Pole to the South Pole.
How the earth is turned on its axis
Gulf Stream
The south pole of one magnet is attracted to the north pole of the other magnet.