论文标题
使用大数据库识别稳定的$ν_6$共振小行星的种群
Identifying the population of stable $ν_6$ resonant asteroids using large databases
论文作者
论文摘要
像在Vera C. Rubin天文台进行的大量观察性调查一样,预计在运营的第一年将发现多达一百万个新的小行星。这将是已知的小行星数据库的两倍以上。需要新的方法和技术来处理大量数据涌入。在这里,我们通过研究$ν_6$世俗共振的稳定轨道上的小行星种群来测试其中一些新方法。这种共振是破坏主皮体轨道并产生近地球小行星(NEAS)的最强机制之一。然而,稳定的轨道构型将小行星周围的围绕物与与土星的共鸣保持对齐或反将。稳定的$ν_6$谐振器的种群现在是世俗共振内部稳定轨道中最大的小行星人口。在这里,我们获得了小行星有史以来最大的小行星适当元素样本。聚类方法和使用机器学习算法的使用允许识别$ν_6$共振和两个全新组的已知小行星家庭:Tiffanykapler和138605 QW177家族。 Tiffanykapler家族是有史以来第一个在线性世俗共鸣中发现的年轻小行星家族,年龄为$ 3.0 \ pm1.2 $ myr,并且是$ v_ {ej} = 15^{+6} _ {+6} _ { - 3} $ m/s的弹出速度velocity field field参数。我们确定蒂娜家族周围的高分子对象的人群,这可能是小行星家族“共振光环”的第一个例子。
Large observational surveys, like those that will be conducted at the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, are expected to discover up to one million new asteroids in the first year of operation. This will more than double the database of known asteroids. New methods and techniques will be needed to handle the large influx of data. Here, we tested some of these new methods by studying the population of asteroids on stable orbits inside the $ν_6$ secular resonance. This resonance is one of the strongest mechanisms for destabilizing the orbits of main-belt bodies and producing Near-Earth Asteroids (NEAs). Yet, stable orbital configurations where the asteroid pericenter is either aligned or anti-aligned with that of Saturn exist inside the resonance. The population of stable $ν_6$ resonators is now the largest population of asteroids in stable orbits inside a secular resonance. Here we obtained the largest sample of asteroids' proper elements ever used for this problem. Clustering methods and the use of machine learning algorithms permitted the identification of the known asteroid families crossed by the $ν_6$ resonance and of two entirely new groups: the Tiffanykapler and the 138605 QW177 families. The Tiffanykapler family is the first young asteroid family ever found in a linear secular resonance, with an age of $3.0\pm1.2$ Myr and an ejection velocity field parameter of $V_{EJ} = 15^{+6}_{-3}$ m/s. We identify a population of high-eccentricity objects around the Tina family that may be the first example of an asteroid family "resonant halo".