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Mars' Tipsy ‘Wiggle and Wobble’ Causes Its Poles to Stray from Planet’s Axis, Claims Study

Mars is only the second known planet in the universe besides the Earth to exhibit the phenomenon known as the Chandler ‘wobble’, with the exact reasons for the phenomenon still a mystery.
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A new study has confirmed that the planet Mars is wiggling while spinning on its axis. The research, ‘Detection of the Chandler Wobble of Mars From Orbiting Spacecraft’, published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, states that a component of the motion of the Mars spin axis, dubbed the Chandler wobble, has been detected, for the first time for any solar system body other than the Earth.

As the Red Planet spins, its poles stray slightly away from its axis of rotation, moving about 4 inches (10 centimeters) approximately every 200 days.

The authors of the study used 18 years of data collected by three satellites orbiting the Red Planet: Mars Odyssey, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and Mars Global Surveyor, to detect the shift in the Martian poles.

​Mars is the second planet in the universe to be known to exhibit the wiggling phenomenon that has been named the Chandler wobble, according to the American Geophysical Union's (AGU) news blog, Eos.org.

The effect, first discovered by astronomer Seth Carlo Chandler over a century ago, is manifested in planets that are not perfectly round.

​In the case of planet Earth, the wobble is more noticeable, with the poles straying about 30 feet (9 m) from the axis of rotation, in a circular pattern repeated about every 433 days.

Puzzling Wobble

While the effect the ‘wobble’ has on our planet Earth is negligible, according to Eos, scientists are still puzzled as to the mechanisms driving it. They originally calculated that the wriggle should ‘naturally die down’ within a century of its origin. However, Earth’s wobble has been continuing unabated.

Mars' Tipsy ‘Wiggle and Wobble’ Causes Its Poles to Stray from Planet’s Axis, Claims Study

The Earth spins around once every 24 hours on its axis, driving the continuous cycle of day and night. Meanwhile, forces cause the Earth to wobble as it spins, with scientists using lasers and mirrors to track the Earth's rotation.

​The wobble is fed to a degree by the pull of gravity from the sun and the moon, as well as variations in atmospheric pressure.

Ocean tide loading - the deformation of the Earth due to the weight of the ocean tides – as well as the wind, which changes the position of the Earth's axis relative to the surface, also feed into the effect.

​Yet another force determines the movement of the rotational axis over a period of a year. The Earth's elliptical orbit around the sun is the reason for this "annual wobble".

In the case of Mars, the authors of the research also believe the wobble will eventually die down.

Mars' Tipsy ‘Wiggle and Wobble’ Causes Its Poles to Stray from Planet’s Axis, Claims Study

As Mars has no oceans, with its surface rocky, with canyons, volcanoes, dry lake beds and craters all over it and red dust shrouding most of it, the wobbly rotation may be triggered by atmospheric pressure changes alone, according to Eos.

Scientists hope that further studies will offer more insight into the mysterious forces at play driving the persistent wonky movements.

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