Pole

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Pole may refer to:

Contents

[edit] Cylindrical objects

  • A solid cylindrical object or column with its length greater than its diameter, for example:
    • Barber's pole, advertising a barber shop
    • Danish pole, circus prop
    • Fireman's pole, wooden pole or a metal tube or pipe installed between floors in fire stations
    • Flagpole (structure), metal pole from which a flag is hung
    • Lamppost, a raised source of light on the edge of a road
    • Pole weapon, combat weapon in which the main fighting part of the weapon is placed on the end of a long shaft, typically of wood
    • Totem pole, monumental sculptures carved from great trees
    • Utility pole, also called a telephone pole, telegraph pole or power pole, a pole that carries utility wires
    • Poles used in sporting and other activities:
      • Dance pole, a pole used for pole dancing
      • Festivus pole, a pole used in the celebration of Festivus that is traditionally made of aluminum
      • Fishing pole, tool used to catch fish
      • Foul pole, used in the sport of baseball to distinguish foul balls from fair balls hit into the outfield
      • Maypole, a tall wooden pole with ornaments, like ribbons, that is danced around
      • Pole bending, a rodeo event that involves riding a horse around six poles arranged in a line
      • Pole position, in motorsport, the position at the front of the grid (originally marked with a pole)
      • Pole-sitting pole, a pole used for pole sitting, which is the practice of sitting on a pole for extended lengths of time
      • Pole vaulting pole, a pole used for pole vaulting
      • Ski pole, a pole used by skiers to improve balance, speed and acceleration
      • Spinnaker pole, a spar used in sailboats to help support and control a variety of headsails, particularly the spinnaker
      • Trekking pole, also called hiking sticks or hiking poles, a pole used for hiking
    • Another name for the rod, a unit of length equal to 11 cubits, 5.0292 meters or 16.5 feet (originally the length of a metal rod, or pole)

[edit] Geography and places

  • Geographical pole, either of two fixed points on the surface of a spinning body or planet, at 90 degrees from the equator, based on the axis around which a body spins
    • North Pole, the northernmost point on the surface of the Earth, where the Earth's axis of rotation intersects the Earth's surface
    • Polar circle, either of two circles of latitude marking the extreme southerly points (northern hemisphere) or northerly points (southern hemisphere) at which the sun may remain above or below the horizon for 24 continuous hours at some point during the year
    • Polar climate, the climate of the polar regions, characterized by a lack of warm summers
    • Polar region, the region within the polar circles, referred to as the Arctic and Antarctic
    • South Pole, the southernmost point on the surface of the Earth, where the Earth's axis of rotation intersects the Earth's surface
    • East Pole and West Pole. Says Christopher Robin to Winnie-the-Pooh these exist as well but "people don't like talking about them"
  • Magnetic pole
    • North Magnetic Pole, the shifting point on the Earth to which the "north" end of a dipole magnet points
    • South Magnetic Pole, the shifting point on the Earth to which the "south" end of a dipole magnet points
  • Mount Everest, the third "top" of the Earth
  • Pole of inaccessibility, a location that is the most challenging to reach owing to its remoteness from geographical features which could provide access
  • Pole, Lubusz Voivodeship (west Poland)

[edit] Astronomy

  • Celestial pole, the projection of the Earth's axis onto the celestial sphere (or analogous concept applied to other bodies)
  • Pole star, a visible star that is approximately aligned with the Earth's axis of rotation
  • Orbital pole
  • For concepts analogous to the Earth's geographic and magnetic poles on other planets and Solar System bodies, see Poles of astronomical bodies

[edit] Science and mathematics

  • One "half" of a dipole
  • Pole, term used in electrical circuits used to describe switch contact variations
  • Pole (complex analysis), a certain type of mathematical singularity
  • Pole and polar, a point that describes the position and orientation of a line with respect to a given circle
  • Landau pole, the energy scale where a coupling constant of a quantum field theory becomes infinite
  • Monopole
    • Magnetic monopole, a hypothetical particle that may be loosely described as a magnet with only one pole
    • Monopole (mathematics), a connection over a principal bundle G with a section (the Higgs field) of the associated adjoint bundle
    • Monopole (wine), an appellation controlled by a single winery
    • Monopole antenna, a radio antenna that replaces half of a dipole antenna with a ground plane at right-angles to the remaining half
  • An element of the configuration of perspective triangles.

[edit] Anatomy/Morphology

  • Anterior and posterior poles, surface vertices of the eye's lens
  • Fetal pole, a thickening on the margin of the yolk sac of a fetus during pregnancy
  • Pole of kidney
  • Cell (biology), either extremity of the main axis of a nucleus, cell, or organism. Important structures situated close to such extremities have also been regarded as poles (e.g. animal cell centrosomes).

[edit] People

  • Pole (musician), an electronic music artist named Stefan Betke
  • Poles, people originating from or inhabiting the country of Poland

[edit] As a surname

[edit] Fictional characters

  • Jill Pole, a fictional character from C. S. Lewis' Chronicles of Narnia series
  • Pole, an opponent in the video game Yie Ar Kung-Fu

[edit] Politics

[edit] See also