arXiv Open Access 2020

The common origin of family and non-family asteroids

Stanley F. Dermott Apostolos A. Christou Dan Li Thomas J. J. Kehoe J. Malcolm Robinson
Lihat Sumber

Abstrak

All asteroids are currently classified as either family, originating from the disruption of known bodies, or non-family. An outstanding question is the origin of these non-family asteroids. Were they formed individually, or as members of known families but with chaotically evolving orbits, or are they members of old ghost families, that is, asteroids with a common parent body but with orbits that no longer cluster in orbital element space? Here, we show that the sizes of the non-family asteroids in the inner belt are correlated with their orbital eccentricities and anticorrelated with their inclinations, suggesting that both non-family and family asteroids originate from a small number of large primordial planetesimals. We estimate that ~85% of the asteroids in the inner main belt originate from the Flora, Vesta, Nysa, Polana and Eulalia families, with the remaining ~15% originating from either the same families or, more likely, a few ghost families. These new results imply that we must seek explanations for the differing characteristics of the various meteorite groups in the evolutionary histories of a few, large, precursor bodies. Our findings also support the model that asteroids formed big through the gravitational collapse of material in a protoplanetary disk.

Topik & Kata Kunci

Penulis (5)

S

Stanley F. Dermott

A

Apostolos A. Christou

D

Dan Li

T

Thomas J. J. Kehoe

J

J. Malcolm Robinson

Format Sitasi

Dermott, S.F., Christou, A.A., Li, D., Kehoe, T.J.J., Robinson, J.M. (2020). The common origin of family and non-family asteroids. https://arxiv.org/abs/2010.13218

Akses Cepat

Lihat di Sumber
Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2020
Bahasa
en
Sumber Database
arXiv
Akses
Open Access ✓