Characterization of Seven Ultra-Wide Trans-Neptunian Binaries
Alex H. Parker, JJ. Kavelaars, Jean-Marc Petit, Lynne Jones, Brett, Gladman, Joel Parker

TL;DR
This study characterizes seven wide-separation Trans-Neptunian binaries, revealing their orbital properties, formation mechanisms, and implications for Kuiper Belt formation and small object size distribution.
Contribution
First detailed orbital characterization of seven wide-separation TNBs, supporting gravitational collapse formation models over hierarchical accretion.
Findings
Most binaries have low mutual inclinations.
Binary systems support in situ formation via gravitational collapse.
Existence of these binaries suggests a shallow small TNO size distribution.
Abstract
The low-inclination component of the Classical Kuiper Belt is host to a population of extremely widely-separated binaries. These systems are similar to other Trans-Neptunian binaries (TNBs) in that the primary and secondary components of each system are of roughly equal size. We have performed an astrometric monitoring campaign of a sample of seven wide-separation, long-period TNBs and present the first-ever well-characterized mutual orbits for each system. The sample contains the most eccentric (2006 CH69, e=0.9) and the most widely-separated, weakly bound (2001 QW322, a/Rh~0.22) binary minor planets known, and also contains the system with lowest-measured mass of any TNB (2000 CF105, M~1.85E17 kg). Four systems orbit in a prograde sense, and three in a retrograde sense. They have a different mutual inclination distribution compared to all other TNBs, preferring low mutual-inclination…
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