Measuring the degree of clustering and diffusion of trans-Neptunian objects
Abstract
The outer solar system is populated by a broad aggregate of minor bodies, which occupy orbits whose dynamical character ranges from long-term stable to rapidly diffusive. We investigate the chaotic properties of known distant trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) by numerically integrating TNO clones and statistically analyzing their orbital diffusion. Comparing the measured diffusion with an analytical criterion yields a dynamically motivated separation into classes of stable, metastable and unstable objects. We then measure the level of clustering of the longitudes of perihelia and of the orbital poles, as functions of orbital distance and of their stability properties. Distant (meta)stable objects appear increasingly clustered in perihelion around ϖ∼50∘ for increasing semi-major axis, while the orbits of unstable objects are well described by two, roughly equally-populated groups of “clustered” and “anti-clustered” objects, with means around ∼25∘ and ∼205∘ respectively. We further find that, compared to the solar system’s total angular momentum vector, the mean orbital poles of distant TNOs are significantly more misaligned for (meta)stable objects, while they remain roughly aligned for unstable objects. TNOs with intermediate orbital periods also appear to be misaligned with respect to the forced plane predicted by secular theory with the known planets. This gradation based on stability, if validated further by the upcoming VRO survey, necessitates a dynamical explanation.
Copyright and License
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Acknowledgement
We thank Rosemary Mardling and an anonymous referee for helpful comments and suggestions which greatly improved the clarity. G.P. wishes to thank the Barr Foundation, United States for their financial support, and Caltech’s GPS Division for their hospitality. K. B. thanks the Packard Foundation, the Caltech Center for Comparative Planetary Evolution (3CPE), and the National Science Foundation, United States (Grant AST 2408867) for their support.
Additional details
Funding
- David and Lucile Packard Foundation
- California Institute of Technology
- Center for Comparative Planetary Evolution (3CPE) -
- National Science Foundation
- AST 2408867