Question
Which best describes Earth’s magnetic field lines?
The field lines go out of Earth at the geographic South Pole and enter Earth at the geographic North Pole in the area where the magnetic pole aligns with the geographic pole.
The field lines go out of Earth near the geographic South Pole and enter Earth near the geographic North Pole in an area where the magnetic pole does not align with the geographic pole.
The field lines go out of Earth at the geographic North Pole and enter Earth at the geographic South Pole in the area where the magnetic pole aligns with the geographic pole.
The field lines go out of Earth near the geographic North Pole and enter Earth near the geographic South Pole in an area where the magnetic pole does not align with the geographic pole.
The field lines go out of Earth at the geographic South Pole and enter Earth at the geographic North Pole in the area where the magnetic pole aligns with the geographic pole.
The field lines go out of Earth near the geographic South Pole and enter Earth near the geographic North Pole in an area where the magnetic pole does not align with the geographic pole.
The field lines go out of Earth at the geographic North Pole and enter Earth at the geographic South Pole in the area where the magnetic pole aligns with the geographic pole.
The field lines go out of Earth near the geographic North Pole and enter Earth near the geographic South Pole in an area where the magnetic pole does not align with the geographic pole.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The best description of Earth’s magnetic field lines is:
**The field lines go out of Earth near the geographic South Pole and enter Earth near the geographic North Pole in an area where the magnetic pole does not align with the geographic pole.**
This is because the magnetic poles of the Earth are not located at the same points as the geographic poles. The magnetic field lines exit the Earth near the geographic South Pole (magnetic South Pole) and re-enter near the geographic North Pole (magnetic North Pole).
**The field lines go out of Earth near the geographic South Pole and enter Earth near the geographic North Pole in an area where the magnetic pole does not align with the geographic pole.**
This is because the magnetic poles of the Earth are not located at the same points as the geographic poles. The magnetic field lines exit the Earth near the geographic South Pole (magnetic South Pole) and re-enter near the geographic North Pole (magnetic North Pole).