2008 LC18: a potentially unstable Neptune Trojan
J. Horner, P. S. Lykawka, M. T. Bannister, P. Francis

TL;DR
This study investigates the orbital stability of Neptune Trojan 2008 LC18, revealing it could be either a temporary capture or a primordial object, depending on its true orbit, with implications for understanding Neptune's Trojan population.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed dynamical analysis of 2008 LC18's orbit, highlighting the importance of precise orbit determination for understanding Neptune Trojan origins.
Findings
2008 LC18's stability depends heavily on semi-major axis.
Objects with semi-major axis < 29.91 AU are unstable (< 100 Myr).
Objects with semi-major axis > 29.91 AU are stable (> 1 Gyr).
Abstract
The recent discovery of the first Neptune Trojan at the planet's trailing (L5) Lagrange point, 2008 LC18, offers an opportunity to confirm the formation mechanism of a member of this important tracer population for the Solar system's dynamical history. We tested the stability of 2008 LC18's orbit through a detailed dynamical study, using test particles spread across the orbital uncertainties in a, e, i and {\Omega}. This showed that the wide uncertainties of the published orbit span regions of both extreme dynamical instability, with lifetimes < 100 Myr, and with significant stability (> 1 Gyr lifetimes). The stability of 2008 LC18's clones is greatly dependent on their semi-major axis and only weakly correlated with their eccentricity. Test particles on orbits with an initial semi-major axis less than 29.91 AU have dynamical half-lives shorter than 100 Myr; in contrast, particles with…
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