m~ray
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martian pole stars same as Earth pole stars ?
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The Martian north celestial pole is located in the constellation Cygnus, near the border of Cepheus, but lacks a prominent pole star due to the faintness of nearby stars. While both Earth and Mars have similar axial tilts, Mars' axis points toward Cygnus/Cepheus, unlike Earth, which points toward Polaris. Both planets experience axial precession, with Earth completing a cycle every 26,000 years and Mars every 175,000 years, suggesting they may share a pole star at different times in the future.
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While the axial tilts are similar in degree, Mars is tilted in a different direction. Earth is tilted so that its axis points toward Polaris. Mars' points toward Cygnus/Cepheus.m~ray said:the question i had asked was, why can the polaris (earth's pole star) not be used as martian pole star when both have similar inclination of rotation axis.