I know that question #4 is B.) Sun
No, The magnetic north shifts overtime due to the rotation of liquid iron in the earth! So your answer would be No they are not always the same distance apart! Hope this helps :)
Because the rays of the sun gives off a stronger brightness.
Also people want to see the effect of the eclipse and are dumb enough to stare at it, which u really can't due to such brightness.
Wind and Ocean Currents: �Heat Movers�<span>Both air currents and ocean currents move heat. Energy is stored as "latent heat" in the atmosphere. In the surface waters of the ocean it is stored as "sensible heat." Atmospheric and oceanic circulation share the task of<span>heat </span>redistribution on a roughly fifty-fifty basis. Even though transfer of heat by moving water in ocean currents is much less efficient than transfer by moving vapor in wind, the masses involved are much greater in the ocean currents than in the air currents.
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