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NEOMOD: A New Orbital Distribution Model for Near Earth Objects

Authors :
Nesvorny, David
Deienno, Rogerio
Bottke, William F.
Jedicke, Robert
Naidu, Shantanu
Chesley, Steven R.
Chodas, Paul W.
Granvik, Mikael
Vokrouhlicky, David
Broz, Miroslav
Morbidelli, Alessandro
Christensen, Eric
Bolin, Bryce T.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Near Earth Objects (NEOs) are a transient population of small bodies with orbits near or in the terrestrial planet region. They represent a mid-stage in the dynamical cycle of asteroids and comets, which starts with their removal from the respective source regions -- the main belt and trans-Neptunian scattered disk -- and ends as bodies impact planets, disintegrate near the Sun, or are ejected from the Solar System. Here we develop a new orbital model of NEOs by numerically integrating asteroid orbits from main belt sources and calibrating the results on observations of the Catalina Sky Survey. The results imply a size-dependent sampling of the main belt with the $\nu_6$ and 3:1 resonances producing $\simeq 30$\% of NEOs with absolute magnitudes $H = 15$ and $\simeq 80$\% of NEOs with $H = 25$. Hence, the large and small NEOs have different orbital distributions. The inferred flux of $H<18$ bodies into the 3:1 resonance can be sustained only if the main-belt asteroids near the resonance drift toward the resonance at the maximal Yarkovsky rate ($\simeq 2 \times 10^{-4}$ au Myr$^{-1}$ for diameter $D=1$ km and semimajor axis $a=2.5$~au). This implies obliquities $\theta \simeq 0^\circ$ for $a<2.5$~au and $\theta \simeq 180^\circ$ for $a>2.5$~au, both in the immediate neighborhood of the resonance (the same applies to other resonances as well). We confirm the size-dependent disruption of asteroids near the Sun found in previous studies. An interested researcher can use the publicly available NEOMOD Simulator to generate user-defined samples of NEOs from our model.<br />Comment: AJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2306.09521
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ace040