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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well there are 2 issues here. there's the magnetic pole and the Rotational Pole. On Earth what we know as the North Pole is the top of the axis about which the planet rotates. We Call it north because when the compass was discovered along with the magnetic field that is roughly where the needle pointed and maps generally have the North at the top by tradition. The actual magnetic north pole is not in the same place as the top of the axis although it is currently only about 6 degrees different but it does vary over time.
In the case of Uranus the planet has been knocked over as you say and rotates on it's side. I do not know where the magnetic poles of Uranus are but I do know that generally with other planets we refer to "the Poles" rather than a specific North or South and that is taken to mean the top and bottom of the axis about which a planet rotates.
Good question! it's to do with it's direction of rotation.
As it happens there is some debate as to whether it's inclination is 97 degrees and it rotates directly or whether it's inclination is 83 degrees and it's rotation is retrograde.
I guess you'd have to know how it spun before it got tired and decided to have a lie down
or at least, one has never been found. if you found one, you'd probably win a nobel prize.
i.e. if you take a bar magnet with north and south parts, and cut the north bit off, then the south bit becomes north and south.
The terrestrial poles are the points on the earth's surface intersecting the axis around which the earth rotates. The North Pole is the one away from the sun in Europe or the States. Viewed from above the North Pole, the earth rotates anti-clockwise. The North Pole of another planet is the one that gives that planet the same direction of rotation as the earth's.
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