4.6 Article

THE EVOLUTION OF ASTEROIDS IN THE JUMPING-JUPITER MIGRATION MODEL

Journal

ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 150, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-6256/150/6/186

Keywords

minor planets, asteroids: general; planets and satellites: dynamical evolution and stability

Funding

  1. Brazilian National Research Council (CNPq) within the Science Without Borders Program [312292/2013-9, 401905/2013-6]
  2. NASA's Solar System Workings program
  3. FAPESP [2009/54006-4]
  4. INCT-A
  5. Pleiades Supercomputer of NASA's High-End Computing Capability
  6. cluster of the Department of Astronomy of the National Observatory of Rio de Janeiro through CAPES [23038.007093/2012-13]

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In this work, we investigate the evolution of a primordial belt of asteroids, represented by a large number of massless test particles, under the gravitational effect of migrating Jovian planets in the framework of the jumping-Jupiter model. We perform several simulations considering test particles distributed in the Main Belt, as well as in the Hilda and Trojan groups. The simulations start with Jupiter and Saturn locked in the mutual 3: 2 mean motion resonance plus three Neptune-mass planets in a compact orbital configuration. Mutual planetary interactions during migration led one of the Neptunes to be ejected in less than 10 Myr of evolution, causing Jupiter to jump by about 0.3 AU in semimajor axis. This introduces a large-scale instability in the studied populations of small bodies. After the migration phase, the simulations are extended over 4 Gyr, and we compare the final orbital structure of the simulated test particles to the current Main Belt of asteroids with absolute magnitude H < 9.7. The results indicate that, in order to reproduce the present Main Belt, the primordial belt should have had a distribution peaked at similar to 10 degrees in inclination and at similar to 0.1 in eccentricity. We discuss the implications of this for the Grand Tack model. The results also indicate that neither primordial Hildas, nor Trojans, survive the instability, confirming the idea that such populations must have been implanted from other sources. In particular, we address the possibility of implantation of Hildas and Trojans from the Main Belt population, but find that this contribution should be minor.

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