Of sorts. Each end of a bar magnet has a specific charge, so i guess yes, they do. The charges attract to magnets with the opposite charge, so the "south" end of a magnet would attract to the "north" end of another.
Every magnet have only two poles like a bar magnet, horse shoe magnet etc.
2
All magnets have two poles.
yes it dose it also has two permanent storms on top of it
No. A planet needs a magnetic field to have magnetic poles.
Venus & Mars have little or none.
Uranus is unusual in that the axis of rotation is almost horizontal as opposed to almost vertical as is true in most cases.
If such an object rotates - and that is the usual case - you can define a north pole and a south pole.
no
The North Pole is at 90 North & the South Pole is at 90 South.
The Earth has a magnetic field around it. The magnetic North is close to what we call the North Pole. The magnetic South is at the South Pole. There is a magnetic North and South and a geographic North and South pole.
North pole, and south pole.North pole, and south pole.North pole, and south pole.North pole, and south pole.
Gulf Stream
Ninety degrees South Latitude for the south pole and ninety degrees North Latitude for the north pole. No longitude indicator is required to position poles on the planet earth.
North and south pole
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.
North pole and South pole
The Earth has a magnetic field around it. The magnetic North is close to what we call the North Pole. The magnetic South is at the South Pole. There is a magnetic North and South and a geographic North and South pole.
The latitude at the north pole is 90° North. Thg elatitude at the south pole is 90° South.
the arctic is the north pole antarctica is the south pole :)
magnetic north north pole =magnetic south
The North Pole.
North pole, and south pole.North pole, and south pole.North pole, and south pole.North pole, and south pole.
How the earth is turned on its axis
There are 180°s from the North Pole to the South Pole.