Magnet Attracts North End of Compass: Meaning

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When a magnet attracts the north end of a compass, it indicates that the magnet's north pole is actually its south pole in magnetic terms. This is because the Earth's magnetic north pole behaves like a south pole, attracting the north pole of the compass. The discussion highlights the principle that opposites attract in magnetism. Therefore, the side of the magnet that attracts the compass's north end is the magnet's south pole. Understanding this concept clarifies the relationship between geographic and magnetic poles.
j doe
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when a magnet attracts the north end of a compass, what does that mean?
 
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What do you think it means?
 
that the part of the magnet that attracts north is also the north pole of the magnet
 
j doe said:
that the part of the magnet that attracts north is also the north pole of the magnet

no, try again
remember the ol' rule about "opposites attract"
 
oh okay so the side that the magnet attracts north on a compass is the south pole of the magnet?
 
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j doe said:
oh okay so the side that the magnet attracts north on a compass is the south pole of the magnet?
Yes. We call the Earth's magnetic north pole a north pole because it is in the north. We call a magnet's north pole a north pole because it is attracted to the Earth's north pole.

But opposites attract. The Earth's "north" pole (in the sense of geography) is its "south" pole (in the sense of how we would label it if it were just another magnet).
 
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j doe said:
oh okay so the side that the magnet attracts north on a compass is the south pole of the magnet?
Well done! See, it just required a bit of grey matter :smile:
 
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