Formation and Dynamical Evolution of the Neptune Trojans - the Influence of the Initial Solar System Architecture
P. S. Lykawka, J. Horner, B. W. Jones, T. Mukai

TL;DR
This study uses extensive simulations to explore how different initial configurations of the early Solar System affected the stability and survival of Neptune Trojans, suggesting most were captured during planetary migration.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the dynamical evolution of Neptune Trojans under various initial planetary architectures, highlighting the likelihood of Trojan capture during planetary migration.
Findings
Most pre-formed Trojans were lost before Neptune's migration.
Compact initial architectures led to higher Trojan depletion.
Resonant configurations increased Trojan erosion significantly.
Abstract
In this work, we investigate the dynamical stability of pre-formed Neptune Trojans under the gravitational influence of the four giant planets in compact planetary architectures, over 10 Myr. In our modelling, the initial orbital locations of Uranus and Neptune (aN) were varied to produce systems in which those planets moved on non-resonant orbits, or in which they lay in their mutual 1:2, 2:3 and 3:4 mean-motion resonances (MMRs). In total, 420 simulations were carried out, examining 42 different architectures, with a total of 840000 particles across all runs. In the non-resonant cases, the Trojans suffered only moderate levels of dynamical erosion, with the most compact systems (those with aN less than or equal 18 AU) losing around 50% of their Trojans by the end of the integrations. In the 2:3 and 3:4 MMR scenarios, however, dynamical erosion was much higher with depletion rates…
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