A Perturbative Treatment of The Co-Orbital Motion

被引:1
|
作者
D. Nesvorný
F. Thomas
S. Ferraz-Mello
A. Morbidelli
机构
[1] Universidade de São Paulo,Instituto Astronômico e Geofísico
[2] Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur,undefined
[3] Observatório Nacional,undefined
关键词
restricted three-body problem; disturbing function; mean motion resonances; Lagrange equilibrium points; co-orbital motion; Trojan asteroids;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
We develop a formalism of the non-singular evaluation of the disturbing function and its derivatives with respect to the canonical variables. We apply this formalism to the case of the perturbed motion of a massless body orbiting the central body (Sun) with a period equal to that of the perturbing (planetary) body. This situation is known as the ‘co-orbital’ motion, or equivalently, as the 1/1 mean motion commensurability. Jupiter's Trojan asteroids, Earth's co-orbital asteroids (e.g., (3753) Cruithne, (3362) Khufu), Mars' co-orbital asteroids (e.g., (5261) Eureka), and some Jupiter-family comets are examples of the co-orbital bodies in our solar system. Other examples are known in the satellite systems of the giant planets. Unlike the classical expansions of the disturbing function, our formalism is valid for any values of eccentricities and inclinations of the perturbed and perturbing body. The perturbation theory is used to compute the main features of the co-orbital dynamics in three approximations of the general three-body model: the planar-circular, planar-elliptic, and spatial-circular models. We develop a new perturbation scheme, which allows us to treat cases where the classical perturbation treatment fails. We show how the families of the tadpole, horseshoe, retrograde satellite and compound orbits vary with the eccentricity and inclination of the small body, and compute them also for the eccentricity of the perturbing body corresponding to a largely eccentric exoplanet's orbit.
引用
收藏
页码:323 / 361
页数:38
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A perturbative treatment of the co-orbital motion
    Nesvorny, D
    Thomas, F
    Ferraz-Mello, S
    Morbidelli, A
    CELESTIAL MECHANICS & DYNAMICAL ASTRONOMY, 2002, 82 (04): : 323 - 361
  • [2] A Perturbative Treatment of the Retrograde Co-orbital Motion
    Sidorenko, Vladislav V.
    ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL, 2020, 160 (06):
  • [3] Stability of co-orbital motion in exoplanetary systems
    Érdi, B
    Sándor, Z
    COMPARISON OF THE DYNAMICAL EVOLUTION OF PLANETARY SYSTEMS, 2005, : 113 - 121
  • [4] Phase structure of co-orbital motion with Jupiter
    Qi, Yi
    de Ruiter, Anton
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2020, 494 (04) : 4695 - 4705
  • [5] Co-orbital motion with slowly varying parameters
    Sicardy, B
    Dubois, V
    CELESTIAL MECHANICS & DYNAMICAL ASTRONOMY, 2003, 86 (04): : 321 - 350
  • [6] Stability of co-orbital motion in exoplanetary systems
    Érdi, B
    Sándor, Z
    CELESTIAL MECHANICS & DYNAMICAL ASTRONOMY, 2005, 92 (1-3): : 113 - 121
  • [7] Stability of Co-Orbital Motion in Exoplanetary Systems
    Bálint Érdi
    Zsolt Sándor
    Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical Astronomy, 2005, 92 (1-3) : 113 - 121
  • [8] Dynamics of two planets in co-orbital motion
    Giuppone, C. A.
    Beauge, C.
    Michtchenko, T. A.
    Ferraz-Mello, S.
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2010, 407 (01) : 390 - 398
  • [9] Co-Orbital Motion with Slowly Varying Parameters
    Bruno Sicardy
    Véronique Dubois
    Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical Astronomy, 2003, 86 : 321 - 350
  • [10] Exchange orbits: an interesting case of co-orbital motion
    Funk, Barbara
    Dvorak, Rudolf
    Schwarz, Richard
    CELESTIAL MECHANICS & DYNAMICAL ASTRONOMY, 2013, 117 (01): : 41 - 58