Recent arrivals to the main asteroid belt

The region where the main asteroid belt is now located may have started empty, to become populated early in the history of the Solar system with material scattered outward by the terrestrial planets and inward by the giant planets. These dynamical pathways toward the main belt may still be active to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Celestial mechanics and dynamical astronomy 2022-10, Vol.134 (5), Article 38
Hauptverfasser: de la Fuente Marcos, Carlos, de la Fuente Marcos, Raúl
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The region where the main asteroid belt is now located may have started empty, to become populated early in the history of the Solar system with material scattered outward by the terrestrial planets and inward by the giant planets. These dynamical pathways toward the main belt may still be active today. Here, we present results from a data mining experiment aimed at singling out present-day members of the main asteroid belt that may have reached the belt during the last few hundred years. Probable newcomers include 2003  BM 1 , 2007  RS 62 , 457175 (2008  GO 98 ), 2010  BG 18 , 2010  JC 58 , 2010  JV 52 , 2010  KS 6 , 2010  LD 74 , 2010  OX 38 , 2011  QQ 99 , 2013  HT 149 , 2015  BH 103 , 2015  BU 525 , 2015  RO 127 , 2015  RS 139 , 2016  PC 41 , 2016  UU 231 , 2020  SA 75 , 2020  UO 43 , and 2021  UJ 5 , all of them in the outer belt. Some of these candidates may have been inserted in their current orbits after experiencing relatively recent close encounters with Jupiter. We also investigated the likely source regions of such new arrivals. Asteroid 2020  UO 43 , if real, has a non-negligible probability of having an origin in the Oort cloud or even interstellar space. Asteroid 2003  BM 1 may have come from the neighborhood of Uranus. However, most newcomers—including 457175, 2011  QQ 99 , and 2021  UJ 5 —might have had an origin in Centaur orbital space. The reliability of these findings is assessed within the context of the uncertainties of the available orbit determinations.
ISSN:0923-2958
1572-9478
DOI:10.1007/s10569-022-10094-4