A long-lived horseshoe companion to the Earth
A.A. Christou and D.J. Asher
MNRAS, 414, 2965-2969 (2011)
Abstract:
We present a dynamical investigation of a newly found asteroid, 2010 SO16,
and the discovery that it is a horseshoe companion of the Earth. The object's
absolute magnitude (H=20.7) makes this the largest object of its type known
to-date. By carrying out numerical integrations of dynamical clones, we find
that (a) its status as a horseshoe is secure given the current accuracy of
its ephemeris, and (b) the time spent in horseshoe libration with the Earth
is several times 10^5 yr, two orders of magnitude longer than determined for
other horseshoe asteroids of the Earth. Further, using a model based on
Hill's approximation to the three-body problem, we show that, apart from the
low eccentricity which prevents close encounters with other planets or the
Earth itself, its stability can be attributed to the value of its Jacobi
constant far from the regime that allows transitions into other co-orbital
modes or escape from the resonance altogether. We provide evidence that the
eventual escape of the asteroid from horseshoe libration is caused by the
action of planetary secular perturbations and the stochastic evolution of the
eccentricity. The questions of its origin and the existence of
as-yet-undiscovered co-orbital companions of the Earth are discussed.
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