Martian Pole Star: Same as Earth's?

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martian pole stars same as Earth pole stars ?
 
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The Martian north celestial pole resides in the constellation Cygnus- near the border of Cepheus.
Unfortunately, the stars nearest the pole are too faint to be useful. The closet is approximately a half-degree away and is barely visible to the naked eye. The pole is close to the halfway point between Deneb in Cygnus and Alderamin in Cepheus-- the brightest stars in their respective constellations.

See the following image:
http://img593.imageshack.us/img593/1663/marsnorthpole.th.jpg

Edit:
Here are a couple of links for further information:
http://Earth'sky.org/space/mars-north-south-star
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astronomy_on_Mars#Celestial_poles_and_ecliptic
 
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my question was different.. your reply answers y Mars doesn't have a good pole star.
 
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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.
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.
 
Also, it is bad form to completely edit your posts to change their meaning. It creates confusion and makes it hard to figure out what's going on. Just add a new post that contains what you want to say.