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Jupiter's Metastable CompanionsJovian co-orbitals share Jupiter's orbit and exhibit 1:1 mean-motion resonance with the planet. This includes >10,000 so-called Trojan asteroids surrounding the leading (L4) and trailing (L5) Lagrange points, viewed as stable groups dating back to planet formation. A small number of extremely transient horseshoe and quasi-satellite co-orbitals have been identified, which only briefly (<1,000 yr) exhibit co-orbital motions. Via an extensive numerical study, we identify for the first time some Trojans that are certainly only "metastable"; instead of being primordial, they are recent captures from heliocentric orbits into moderately long-lived (10 kyr–100 Myr) metastable states that will escape back to the scattering regime. We have also identified (1) the first two Jovian horseshoe co-orbitals that exist for many resonant libration periods and (2) eight Jovian quasi-satellites with metastable lifetimes of 4–130 kyr. Our perspective on the Trojan population is thus now more complex as Jupiter joins the other giant planets in having known metastable co-orbitals that are in steady-state equilibrium with the planet-crossing Centaur and asteroid populations; the 27 identified here are in agreement with theoretical estimates.
Document ID
20250003406
Acquisition Source
2230 Support
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Sarah Greenstreet ORCID
(University of Washington Seattle, United States)
Brett Gladman ORCID
(University of British Columbia Vancouver, Canada)
Mario Jurić ORCID
(University of Washington Seattle, United States)
Date Acquired
April 7, 2025
Publication Date
March 7, 2024
Publication Information
Publication: The Astrophysical Journal Letters
Publisher: American Astronomical Society
Volume: 963
Issue: 2
Issue Publication Date: March 10, 2024
ISSN: 2041-8205
e-ISSN: 2041-8213
Subject Category
Astrophysics
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC22K0978
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Use by or on behalf of the US Gov. Permitted.
Technical Review
Keywords
Jupiter trojans
Celestial mechanics
N-body simulations
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