A number of studies, referring to the observed Trojan asteroids of various planets in our Solar System, or to hypothetical Trojan bodies in extrasolar planetary systems, have emphasized the importance of so-called secondary resonances in the problem of the long term stability of Trojan motions. Such resonances describe commensurabilities between the fast, synodic, and secular frequency of the Trojan body, and, possibly, additional slow frequencies produced by more than one perturbing bodies. The presence of secondary resonances sculpts the dynamical structure of the phase space. Hence, identifying their location is a relevant task for theoretical studies. In the present paper we combine the methods introduced in two recent papers (Páez and Efthymiopoulos in Celest Mech Dyn Astron 121(2):139, 2015; Páez and Locatelli in MNRAS 453(2):2177, 2015) in order to analytically predict the location of secondary resonances in the Trojan problem. In Páez and Efthymiopoulos (2015), the motion of a Trojan body was studied in the context of the planar Elliptic Restricted Three Body or the planar Restricted Multi-Planet Problem. It was shown that the Hamiltonian admits a generic decomposition H= Hb+ Hsec. The term Hb, called the basic Hamiltonian, is a model of two degrees of freedom characterizing the short-period and synodic motions of a Trojan body. Also, it yields a constant ‘proper eccentricity’ allowing to define a third secular frequency connected to the body’s perihelion precession. Hsec contains all remaining secular perturbations due to the primary or to additional perturbing bodies. Here, we first investigate up to what extent the decomposition H= Hb+ Hsec provides a meaningful model. To this end, we produce numerical examples of surfaces of section under Hb and compare with those of the full model. We also discuss how secular perturbations alter the dynamics under Hb. Secondly, we explore the normal form approach introduced in Páez and Locatelli (2015) in order to find an ‘averaged over the fast angle’ model derived from Hb, circumventing the problem of the series’ limited convergence due to the collision singularity at the 1:1 MMR. Finally, using this averaged model, we compute semi-analytically the position of the most important secondary resonances and compare the results with those found by numerical stability maps in specific examples. We find a very good agreement between semi-analytical and numerical results in a domain whose border coincides with the transition to large-scale chaotic Trojan motions.

Páez, R.i., Locatelli, U., Efthymiopoulos, C. (2016). New Hamiltonian expansions adapted to the Trojan problem. CELESTIAL MECHANICS & DYNAMICAL ASTRONOMY, 126(4), 519-541 [10.1007/s10569-016-9710-3].

New Hamiltonian expansions adapted to the Trojan problem

Páez, Rocío Isabel;Locatelli, Ugo;
2016-01-01

Abstract

A number of studies, referring to the observed Trojan asteroids of various planets in our Solar System, or to hypothetical Trojan bodies in extrasolar planetary systems, have emphasized the importance of so-called secondary resonances in the problem of the long term stability of Trojan motions. Such resonances describe commensurabilities between the fast, synodic, and secular frequency of the Trojan body, and, possibly, additional slow frequencies produced by more than one perturbing bodies. The presence of secondary resonances sculpts the dynamical structure of the phase space. Hence, identifying their location is a relevant task for theoretical studies. In the present paper we combine the methods introduced in two recent papers (Páez and Efthymiopoulos in Celest Mech Dyn Astron 121(2):139, 2015; Páez and Locatelli in MNRAS 453(2):2177, 2015) in order to analytically predict the location of secondary resonances in the Trojan problem. In Páez and Efthymiopoulos (2015), the motion of a Trojan body was studied in the context of the planar Elliptic Restricted Three Body or the planar Restricted Multi-Planet Problem. It was shown that the Hamiltonian admits a generic decomposition H= Hb+ Hsec. The term Hb, called the basic Hamiltonian, is a model of two degrees of freedom characterizing the short-period and synodic motions of a Trojan body. Also, it yields a constant ‘proper eccentricity’ allowing to define a third secular frequency connected to the body’s perihelion precession. Hsec contains all remaining secular perturbations due to the primary or to additional perturbing bodies. Here, we first investigate up to what extent the decomposition H= Hb+ Hsec provides a meaningful model. To this end, we produce numerical examples of surfaces of section under Hb and compare with those of the full model. We also discuss how secular perturbations alter the dynamics under Hb. Secondly, we explore the normal form approach introduced in Páez and Locatelli (2015) in order to find an ‘averaged over the fast angle’ model derived from Hb, circumventing the problem of the series’ limited convergence due to the collision singularity at the 1:1 MMR. Finally, using this averaged model, we compute semi-analytically the position of the most important secondary resonances and compare the results with those found by numerical stability maps in specific examples. We find a very good agreement between semi-analytical and numerical results in a domain whose border coincides with the transition to large-scale chaotic Trojan motions.
2016
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore MAT/07 - FISICA MATEMATICA
English
Hamiltonian formalism; Minor bodies; Normal forms; Perturbation theory; Restricted Multi-Planet Problem (RMPP); Trojan bodies; Astronomy and Astrophysics; Space and Planetary Science
http://www.kluweronline.com/issn/0923-2958
Páez, R.i., Locatelli, U., Efthymiopoulos, C. (2016). New Hamiltonian expansions adapted to the Trojan problem. CELESTIAL MECHANICS & DYNAMICAL ASTRONOMY, 126(4), 519-541 [10.1007/s10569-016-9710-3].
Páez, Ri; Locatelli, U; Efthymiopoulos, C
Articolo su rivista
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
PaeLocEft-CMDA-2016.pdf

solo utenti autorizzati

Licenza: Copyright dell'editore
Dimensione 6.85 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
6.85 MB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/199723
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 5
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 5
social impact