4.6 Article

Shape models and spin states of Jupiter Trojans Testing the streaming instability formation scenario☆

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 679, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202346022

Keywords

minor planets, asteroids: individual: Jupiter Trojans; surveys; methods: numerical; methods: data analysis

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The leading theory for the origin of Jupiter Trojans (JTs) suggests that they were captured near the Lagrangian points of Jupiter during the early reconfiguration of the giant planets. This study compiled photometric datasets for about 1000 JTs and found that their pole distribution is consistent with the expectations from the formation model of planetesimals. However, some JTs exhibit large variations in rotation pole, possibly due to collisional activity.
The leading theory for the origin of Jupiter Trojans (JTs) assumes that JTs were captured to their orbits near the Lagrangian points of Jupiter during the early reconfiguration of the giant planets. The natural source region for the majority of JTs would then be the population of planetesimals born in a massive trans-Neptunian disk. If true, JTs represent the most accessible stable population of small Solar System bodies that formed in the outer regions of the Solar System. For this work, we compiled photometric datasets for about 1000 JTs and applied the convex inversion technique in order to assess their shapes and spin states. We obtained full solutions for 79 JTs, and partial solutions for an additional 31 JTs. We found that the observed distribution of the pole obliquities of JTs is broadly consistent with expectations from the streaming instability, which is the leading mechanism for the formation of planetesimals in the trans-Neptunian disk. The observed JTs' pole distribution has a slightly smaller prograde vs. retrograde asymmetry (excess of obliquities >130 degrees) than what is expected from the existing streaming instability simulations. However, this discrepancy can be plausibly reconciled by the effects of the post-formation collisional activity. Our numerical simulations of the post-capture spin evolution indicate that the JTs' pole distribution is not significantly affected by dynamical processes such as the eccentricity excitation in resonances, close encounters with planets, or the effects of nongravitational forces. However, a few JTs exhibit large latitude variations of the rotation pole and may even temporarily transition between prograde- and retrograde-rotating categories.

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