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单词 magnetic pole
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magnetic pole


magnetic pole

n.1. Either of the two ends of a magnet at which the field of the magnet is most intense. Each pole is designated by the approximate geographic direction in which it points, either north or south. Like magnetic poles repel; opposite magnetic poles attract.2. A geomagnetic pole.

magnetic pole

n 1. (General Physics) either of two regions in a magnet where the magnetic induction is concentrated 2. (Physical Geography) either of two variable points on the earth's surface towards which a magnetic needle points, where the lines of force of the earth's magnetic field are vertical

magnet′ic pole′


n. 1. the region of a magnet toward which the lines of magnetic induction converge ( south pole) or from which the lines of induction diverge ( north pole). 2. either of the two points on the earth's surface where the dipping needle of a compass stands vertical, one in the arctic, the other in the antarctic. [1695–1705]

magnetic pole

1. Either of two areas of a magnet where the magnetic field is strongest. See Note at magnetism.2. Either of two points on the Earth's surface toward which a compass needle points. One of these points is referred to as the North Pole, and one as the South Pole. The location of the magnetic poles, which are found near to but not exactly at the geographic poles, changes gradually over time.
Thesaurus
Noun1.magnetic pole - either of two points where the lines of force of the Earth's magnetic field are verticalmagnetic pole - either of two points where the lines of force of the Earth's magnetic field are verticalgeographic point, geographical point - a point on the surface of the Earth
2.magnetic pole - one of the two ends of a magnet where the magnetism seems to be concentratedmagnetic pole - one of the two ends of a magnet where the magnetism seems to be concentratedpolemagnet - (physics) a device that attracts iron and produces a magnetic fieldnegative magnetic pole, south-seeking pole, negative pole - the pole of a magnet that points toward the south when the magnet is suspended freelynorth-seeking pole, positive magnetic pole, positive pole - the pole of a magnet that points toward the north when the magnet is suspended freelyend, terminal - either extremity of something that has length; "the end of the pier"; "she knotted the end of the thread"; "they rode to the end of the line"; "the terminals of the anterior arches of the fornix"

magnetic pole


magnetic pole,

the two roughly opposite ends of the planet where the earth's magnetic intensity is the greatest, as the north and south magnetic poles. For the magnetic north, it is the direction from any point on the earth's surface linking the horizontal component of the magnetic lines of force with the observer and north magnetic pole; it is similar for magnetic south. The north magnetic pole, first located (1831) by British explorer Sir James C. RossRoss, Sir James Clark,
1800–1862, British polar explorer and rear admiral. In 1818 he accompanied his uncle, Sir John Ross, in search of the Northwest Passage and commanded the Erebus.
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, has shifted over time from N Canada into the Arctic Sea near the North Pole. The south magnetic pole, reached (1909) by Australian geologists Sir T. W. E. DavidDavid, T. W. E.
(Sir Tannatt William Edgeworth), 1858–1935, Australian geologist and explorer, b. near Cardiff, Wales. David came to Australia in 1882 as an assistant geological surveyor. In 1891 he was appointed professor of geology and physical geography at the Univ.
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 and Sir Douglas MawsonMawson, Sir Douglas,
1882–1958, Australian antarctic explorer and geologist, b. England. His first geographical expedition was to the New Hebrides Islands as a geologist in 1903.
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, is now off the Adélie Coast of Antarctica. The magnetic poles are not fixed but follow circular paths with diameters of about 100 miles (160 km). Studies of paleomagnetismpaleomagnetism,
study of the intensity and orientation of the earth's magnetic field as preserved in the magnetic orientation of certain minerals found in rocks formed throughout geologic time.
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 also indicate that the earth's magnetic field has reversed its polarity many times in the geologic past. The best hypothesis to date for the origin of terrestrial magnetism is the self-exciting dynamo theory, where the earth's magnetic field is generated by the interaction of motion and electrical currents in the earth's liquid outer core.

pole, magnetic:

see magnetic polemagnetic pole,
the two roughly opposite ends of the planet where the earth's magnetic intensity is the greatest, as the north and south magnetic poles. For the magnetic north, it is the direction from any point on the earth's surface linking the horizontal component of the
..... Click the link for more information.
.

Magnetic Pole

 

a section of the surface of a magnetized object (magnet) at which the normal component of magnetization Jn is different from zero.

If the magnetic flux in a sample object and its surrounding space are represented graphically by the lines of induction of the magnetic field, the magnetic pole will correspond to the place at which the lines intersect the object’s surface. The section of the surface from which the lines of force emanate is usually called the north (N), or positive, magnetic pole; the section toward which these lines are directed is the south (S), or negative, pole. Like poles repel, and unlike poles attract. Following the analogies of the interaction of electric charges, a magnetic pole can be assigned a nonzero surface density of magnetic charges σm = Jn, although in fact there are no magnetic charges. As a result of the absence of magnetic charges in nature, the lines of magnetic induction cannot be broken in an object, and the object must always have pairs of equivalent magnetic poles of opposite polarity. Magnets and electromagnets with a large number of such pairs are used for many technical purposes (for example, in direct-current machinery).

Magnetic poles are also considered in the study of geomagnetism. The north magnetic pole of the needle of a magnetic compass indicates the direction of the earth’s north pole (or, more accurately, the earth’s south magnetic pole, which is located in the northern hemisphere), and the south pole indicates the direction of the earth’s south pole (its north magnetic pole).

REFERENCES

Vonsovskii, S. V. Magnetizm. Moscow, 1971.
lanovskii, B. M. Zemnoi magnetizm [3rd ed.], vol. 1. Leningrad, 1964.

Magnetic Pole

 

a point on the earth’s surface at which the vector of induction of the earth’s magnetic field is directed vertically, downward at the north pole and upward at the south pole. Local magnetic poles are observed in the regions of certain very strong magnetic anomalies, for example, the Kursk and Eastern Siberian anomalies. The magnetic poles are close to the geographic poles.

All magnetic isogonic lines and meridians converge at the magnetic poles. The coordinates and polarity of the magnetic poles change over time; the coordinates for 1970, according to refined data, were as follows: 75.0° ± 0.5° S lat., 99.0° ± 1.0°W long, for the northern hemisphere and 66.5° ± 0.5° S lat., 140.0° ± 1.0° E long, for the southern hemisphere.

The polarity of the earth’s magnetic field in the current epoch is such that the south, or negative, magnetic pole is located in the northern hemisphere and the north, or positive, magnetic pole is located in the southern hemisphere. However, it is common practice to refer to the magnetic poles in conformity with the hemispheres in which they are located.

REFERENCES

Ianovskii, B. M. Zemnoi magnetizm, parts 1–2. Leningrad, 1963–64.
Medvedev, N. D. “K voprosu sovremennogo polozheniia magnitnoi osi Zemli.” Biulleten’Sovetskoi Antarkticheskoi ekspeditsii, 1972, no. 84, p. 89.

magnetic pole

[mag′ned·ik ′pōl] (electromagnetism) One of two regions located at the ends of a magnet that generate and respond to magnetic fields in much the same way that electric charges generate and respond to electric fields. A particle which generates and responds to magnetic fields in exactly the same way that electric charges generate and respond to electric fields; the particle probably does not have physical reality, but it is often convenient to imagine that a magnetic dipole consists of two magnetic poles of opposite sign, separated by a small distance. (geophysics) In geomagnetism, either of the two points on the earth's surface where the magnetic meridians converge, that is, where the magnetic field is vertical. Also known as dip pole.

magnetic pole

1. either of two regions in a magnet where the magnetic induction is concentrated 2. either of two variable points on the earth's surface towards which a magnetic needle points, where the lines of force of the earth's magnetic field are vertical

magnetic pole


Related to magnetic pole: Magnetic North Pole
  • noun

Synonyms for magnetic pole

noun either of two points where the lines of force of the Earth's magnetic field are vertical

Related Words

  • geographic point
  • geographical point

noun one of the two ends of a magnet where the magnetism seems to be concentrated

Synonyms

  • pole

Related Words

  • magnet
  • negative magnetic pole
  • south-seeking pole
  • negative pole
  • north-seeking pole
  • positive magnetic pole
  • positive pole
  • end
  • terminal
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更新时间:2025/2/7 18:26:17