Formation of Kuiper-belt binaries through multiple chaotic scattering encounters with low-mass intruders
Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc. 360 (2005) 401-415 The discovery that many trans-neptunian objects exist in pairs, or binaries, is proving invaluable for shedding light on the formation, evolution and structure of the outer Solar system. Based on recent systematic searches it has been estimated that up to 1...
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Zusammenfassung: | Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc. 360 (2005) 401-415 The discovery that many trans-neptunian objects exist in pairs, or binaries,
is proving invaluable for shedding light on the formation, evolution and
structure of the outer Solar system. Based on recent systematic searches it has
been estimated that up to 10% of Kuiper-belt objects might be binaries.
However, all examples discovered to-date are unusual, as compared to near-Earth
and main-belt asteroid binaries, for their mass ratios of order unity and their
large, eccentric orbits. In this article we propose a common dynamical origin
for these compositional and orbital properties based on four-body simulations
in the Hill approximation. Our calculations suggest that binaries are produced
through the following chain of events: initially, long-lived quasi-bound
binaries form by two bodies getting entangled in thin layers of dynamical chaos
produced by solar tides within the Hill sphere. Next, energy transfer through
gravitational scattering with a low-mass intruder nudges the binary into a
nearby non-chaotic, stable zone of phase space. Finally, the binary hardens
(loses energy) through a series of relatively gentle gravitational scattering
encounters with further intruders. This produces binary orbits that are well
fitted by Kepler ellipses. Dynamically, the overall process is strongly favored
if the original quasi-bound binary contains comparable masses. We propose a
simplified model of chaotic scattering to explain these results. Our findings
suggest that the observed preference for roughly equal mass ratio binaries is
probably a real effect; that is, it is not primarily due to an observational
bias for widely separated, comparably bright objects. Nevertheless, we predict
that a sizeable population of very unequal mass Kuiper-belt binaries is likely
awaiting discovery. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/0504060 |