Influence of the coorbital resonance on the rotation of the Trojan satellites of Saturn
Philippe Robutel (IMCCE), Nicolas Rambaux (IMCCE), Maryame El Moutamid, (IMCCE, LESIA)

TL;DR
This paper develops rotational models for Saturn's coorbital satellites to understand how coorbital perturbations influence their rotation, using explicit perturbation formalism based on coorbital motion dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a new formalism to explicitly incorporate coorbital perturbations into the rotational models of Saturn's Trojan satellites.
Findings
Models show coorbital perturbations significantly affect satellite rotation.
Explicit perturbation formalism improves rotational dynamics understanding.
Preparation for future observational data analysis.
Abstract
The Cassini spacecraft collects high resolution images of the saturnian satellites and reveals the surface of these new worlds. The shape and rotation of the satellites can be determined from the Cassini Imaging Science Subsystem data, employing limb coordinates and stereogrammetric control points. This is the case for Epimetheus (Tiscareno et al. 2009) that opens elaboration of new rotational models (Tiscareno et al. 2009; Noyelles 2010; Robutel et al. 2011). Especially, Epimetheus is characterized by its horseshoe shape orbit and the presence of the swap is essential to introduce explicitly into rotational models. During its journey in the saturnian system, Cassini spacecraft accumulates the observational data of the other satellites and it will be possible to determine the rotational parameters of several of them. To prepare these future observations, we built rotational models of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
