Kirkwood gaps and diffusion along mean motion resonances in the restricted planar three-body problem
Jacques Fejoz, Marcel Guardia, Vadim Kaloshin, Pablo Roldan

TL;DR
This paper investigates the dynamics near mean motion resonances in the restricted three-body problem, revealing mechanisms for asteroid eccentricity changes that could explain the formation of Kirkwood gaps.
Contribution
It constructs non local diffusing orbits in the three-body problem and links these to the formation of Kirkwood gaps, challenging assumptions about long-term stability.
Findings
Existence of diffusing orbits with significant eccentricity variation
Potential explanation for Kirkwood gaps in the asteroid belt
Diffusion time scales estimated to be logarithmic in parameters
Abstract
We study the dynamics of the restricted planar three-body problem near mean motion resonances, i.e. a resonance involving the Keplerian periods of the two lighter bodies revolving around the most massive one. This problem is often used to model Sun--Jupiter--asteroid systems. For the primaries (Sun and Jupiter), we pick a realistic mass ratio and a small eccentricity . The main result is a construction of a variety of non local diffusing orbits which show a drastic change of the osculating (instant) eccentricity of the asteroid, while the osculating semi major axis is kept almost constant. The proof relies on the careful analysis of the circular problem, which has a hyperbolic structure, but for which diffusion is prevented by KAM tori. We verify certain non-degeneracy conditions numerically. Based on the work of Treschev, it is natural to conjecture that…
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