The fundamental role of the Oort cloud in determining the flux of comets through the planetary system
V.V. Emel'yanenko, D.J. Asher and M.E. Bailey
MNRAS, 381, 779-789 (2007)
Abstract:
A model of the Oort cloud has been developed by accounting for planetary,
stellar and Galactic perturbations using numerical symplectic integrations
covering 4.5 Gyr. The model is consistent with the broad dynamical
characteristics of the observed cometary populations injected from the Oort
cloud into different regions of the Solar system. We show that the majority
of observed high-eccentricity trans-Neptunian objects, Centaurs and
short-period comets have visited the Oort cloud (a > 1000 au) during their
dynamical history. Assuming from observations that the near-parabolic flux
from the Oort cloud with absolute magnitudes H10 < 7, perihelion distances
q < 5 au and a > 10^4 au is approximately 1 comet per year, our calculations
imply a present Oort cloud population of ~5 x 10^11 comets with H10 < 10.9.
Roughly half this number has a > 10^4 au. The number of comets reaching the
planetary region from the Oort cloud (a > 1000 au) is more than an order of
magnitude higher per unit perihelion distance immediately beyond Neptune than
in the observable zone q < 5 au. Similarly, the new-comet flux from the Oort
cloud per unit perihelion distance is a few tens of times higher in the
near-Neptune region than in the observable zone. The present number of
high-eccentricity trans-Neptunian objects (q > 30 au and 60 200 au and/or q > 40 au, and they are found mostly to originate from
initial orbits with 25 < q < 36 au. Similarly, the number of Centaurs
produced from the Oort cloud, where we define Centaurs to have 5 < q < 28 au
and a < 1000 au, is smaller by a factor of 20-30. About 90 per cent of these
Centaurs have a > 60 au. Objects that have visited the Oort cloud represent
a substantial fraction of the Jupiter-family comet population, achieving
short-period orbits by a process of gradual dynamical transfer, including a
Centaur stage, from the outer Solar system to near-Earth space. A similar
mechanism produces Halley-type comets, in addition to the well-known
diffusion process operating at small perihelion distances.
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