Planetary Trojans - the main source of short period comets?
Jonathan Horner, Patryk Sofia Lykawka

TL;DR
This paper reviews the potential role of planetary Trojan clouds, especially Neptune's, as a significant source of short-period comets and Centaurs impacting the inner Solar system.
Contribution
It provides simulation-based evidence that Neptune Trojans could be a major source of Centaurs, challenging previous assumptions about their origins.
Findings
Neptune Trojans may contribute up to 3% of the Centaur population.
Simulations suggest Neptune Trojans could be the main source of new Centaurs.
Further observational work is needed to confirm the contribution of Trojans.
Abstract
We present a short review of the impact regime experienced by the terrestrial planets within our own Solar system, describing the three populations of potentially hazardous objects which move on orbits that take them through the inner Solar system. Of these populations, the origins of two (the Near-Earth Asteroids and the Long-Period Comets) are well understood, with members originating in the Asteroid belt and Oort cloud, respectively. By contrast, the source of the third population, the Short-Period Comets, is still under debate. The proximate source of these objects is the Centaurs, a population of dynamically unstable objects that pass perihelion between the orbits of Jupiter and Neptune. However, a variety of different origins have been suggested for the Centaur population. Here, we present evidence that at least a significant fraction of the Centaur population can be sourced from…
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