Orbital Distribution of Minor Planets in the Inner Solar System and their Impact Fluxes on the Earth, the Moon and Mars

The planet crossing asteroids in the inner solar system have strongly chaotic orbits and the distributions of their angular elements (longitude of ascending node, Ω; argument of perihelion, ω; and longitude of perihelion, ϖ) are often regarded as uniform random. In the last decade, the known populat...

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Main Author: JeongAhn (Chung), Youngmin
Other Authors: Malhotra, Renu
Language:en_US
Published: The University of Arizona. 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/579034
id ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-579034
record_format oai_dc
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Cratering
Impact Flux
Mars
Orbital Dynamics
Planetary Sciences
Asteroids
spellingShingle Cratering
Impact Flux
Mars
Orbital Dynamics
Planetary Sciences
Asteroids
JeongAhn (Chung), Youngmin
Orbital Distribution of Minor Planets in the Inner Solar System and their Impact Fluxes on the Earth, the Moon and Mars
description The planet crossing asteroids in the inner solar system have strongly chaotic orbits and the distributions of their angular elements (longitude of ascending node, Ω; argument of perihelion, ω; and longitude of perihelion, ϖ) are often regarded as uniform random. In the last decade, the known population of these minor planets has increased by more than a factor of four, providing a sufficiently large dataset for statistical analysis of their distribution. By choosing the observationally complete set of bright objects, we quantified the level of intrinsic non-uniformities of the angular elements for the following dynamical subgroups of Near Earth Objects (NEOs) and Mars Crossing Objects (MCOs): three subgroups of NEOs (Atens, Apollos, and Amors) and two inclination subgroups of MCOs (high and low inclination MCOs, with the boundary at inclination of 15°). Using the methods of angular statistics, we found several statistically significant departures from uniform random angular distributions. We were able to link most of them with the effects of secular planetary perturbations. The distribution of the longitude of ascending node, Ω, for NEOs is slightly enhanced near the ascending node of Jupiter due to the secularly forced inclination vector. Apollos and high inclination MCOs have axial enhancement of ω due to secular dynamics associated with inclination-eccentricity-ω coupling; these enhancements show opposite trends in these two subgroups. The ϖ distributions of Amors and of MCOs are peaked towards the secularly forced eccentricity vector, close to the ϖ value of Jupiter. These non-uniform distributions of the angular elements may affect the asteroidal impact fluxes on the planets. We developed a new approach that accounts for the non-uniform angular elements of planet crossing asteroids to investigate the impact flux and its seasonal variation on the Earth, the Moon, and Mars. The calculation for this study was achieved by generating many clones of the observationally complete subset of bright planet-crossing objects, measuring the Minimum Orbit Intersection Distance (MOID) between the planet and the clones, and making use of the classical formulation of Wetherill (1967) for the collision probability of two objects on independent Keplerian orbits. We developed a novel method to calculate the collision probability for near-tangential encounters; this resolves a singularity in the Wetherill formulation. The impact flux of NEOs on the Earth-Moon system is found to be not affected significantly by the non-uniform distribution of angular elements of NEOs. The impact flux on Mars, however, is found to be reduced by a factor of about 2 compared to the flux that would obtain from the assumption of uniform random distributions of the angular elements of MCOs. Moreover, the impact flux on Mars has a strong seasonal variation, with a peak when the planet is near aphelion. We found that the amplitude of this seasonal variation is a factor of 4-5 times smaller compared to what would be obtained with a uniform random distribution of the angular elements of MCOs. We calculate that the aphelion impact flux on Mars is about three times larger than its perihelion impact flux. We also calculate the current Mars/Moon impact flux ratio as 2.9-5.0 for kilometer size projectiles.
author2 Malhotra, Renu
author_facet Malhotra, Renu
JeongAhn (Chung), Youngmin
author JeongAhn (Chung), Youngmin
author_sort JeongAhn (Chung), Youngmin
title Orbital Distribution of Minor Planets in the Inner Solar System and their Impact Fluxes on the Earth, the Moon and Mars
title_short Orbital Distribution of Minor Planets in the Inner Solar System and their Impact Fluxes on the Earth, the Moon and Mars
title_full Orbital Distribution of Minor Planets in the Inner Solar System and their Impact Fluxes on the Earth, the Moon and Mars
title_fullStr Orbital Distribution of Minor Planets in the Inner Solar System and their Impact Fluxes on the Earth, the Moon and Mars
title_full_unstemmed Orbital Distribution of Minor Planets in the Inner Solar System and their Impact Fluxes on the Earth, the Moon and Mars
title_sort orbital distribution of minor planets in the inner solar system and their impact fluxes on the earth, the moon and mars
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/579034
work_keys_str_mv AT jeongahnchungyoungmin orbitaldistributionofminorplanetsintheinnersolarsystemandtheirimpactfluxesontheearththemoonandmars
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-5790342015-10-23T05:47:48Z Orbital Distribution of Minor Planets in the Inner Solar System and their Impact Fluxes on the Earth, the Moon and Mars JeongAhn (Chung), Youngmin Malhotra, Renu Malhotra, Renu Byrne, Shane Giacalone, Joe Greenberg, Rick Matsuyama, Isamu Cratering Impact Flux Mars Orbital Dynamics Planetary Sciences Asteroids The planet crossing asteroids in the inner solar system have strongly chaotic orbits and the distributions of their angular elements (longitude of ascending node, Ω; argument of perihelion, ω; and longitude of perihelion, ϖ) are often regarded as uniform random. In the last decade, the known population of these minor planets has increased by more than a factor of four, providing a sufficiently large dataset for statistical analysis of their distribution. By choosing the observationally complete set of bright objects, we quantified the level of intrinsic non-uniformities of the angular elements for the following dynamical subgroups of Near Earth Objects (NEOs) and Mars Crossing Objects (MCOs): three subgroups of NEOs (Atens, Apollos, and Amors) and two inclination subgroups of MCOs (high and low inclination MCOs, with the boundary at inclination of 15°). Using the methods of angular statistics, we found several statistically significant departures from uniform random angular distributions. We were able to link most of them with the effects of secular planetary perturbations. The distribution of the longitude of ascending node, Ω, for NEOs is slightly enhanced near the ascending node of Jupiter due to the secularly forced inclination vector. Apollos and high inclination MCOs have axial enhancement of ω due to secular dynamics associated with inclination-eccentricity-ω coupling; these enhancements show opposite trends in these two subgroups. The ϖ distributions of Amors and of MCOs are peaked towards the secularly forced eccentricity vector, close to the ϖ value of Jupiter. These non-uniform distributions of the angular elements may affect the asteroidal impact fluxes on the planets. We developed a new approach that accounts for the non-uniform angular elements of planet crossing asteroids to investigate the impact flux and its seasonal variation on the Earth, the Moon, and Mars. The calculation for this study was achieved by generating many clones of the observationally complete subset of bright planet-crossing objects, measuring the Minimum Orbit Intersection Distance (MOID) between the planet and the clones, and making use of the classical formulation of Wetherill (1967) for the collision probability of two objects on independent Keplerian orbits. We developed a novel method to calculate the collision probability for near-tangential encounters; this resolves a singularity in the Wetherill formulation. The impact flux of NEOs on the Earth-Moon system is found to be not affected significantly by the non-uniform distribution of angular elements of NEOs. The impact flux on Mars, however, is found to be reduced by a factor of about 2 compared to the flux that would obtain from the assumption of uniform random distributions of the angular elements of MCOs. Moreover, the impact flux on Mars has a strong seasonal variation, with a peak when the planet is near aphelion. We found that the amplitude of this seasonal variation is a factor of 4-5 times smaller compared to what would be obtained with a uniform random distribution of the angular elements of MCOs. We calculate that the aphelion impact flux on Mars is about three times larger than its perihelion impact flux. We also calculate the current Mars/Moon impact flux ratio as 2.9-5.0 for kilometer size projectiles. 2015 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/579034 en_US Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.