On the Dynamics and Origin of Haumea's Moons
Matija \'Cuk, Darin Ragozzine, David Nesvorn\'y

TL;DR
This paper investigates the origins and orbital dynamics of Haumea's moons, proposing they are second-generation satellites formed after a large moon's breakup, with implications for their masses, orbits, and the Haumea family formation.
Contribution
It introduces a new formation scenario for Haumea's moons involving limited tidal evolution and a past large moon breakup, challenging previous models.
Findings
Moons' masses are about half of previous estimates.
Moons likely formed from a flat disk near current locations.
Moons may have retrograde orbits, supporting the disrupted satellite hypothesis.
Abstract
The dwarf planet Haumea has two large satellites, Namaka and Hi'iaka, which orbit at relatively large separations. Both moons have significant eccentricities and inclinations, in a pattern that is consistent with a past orbital resonance (Ragozzine and Brown, 2009). Based on our analysis, we find that the present system is not consistent with satellite formation close to the primary and tidal evolution though mean-motion resonances. We propose that Namaka experienced only limited tidal evolution, leading to the mutual 8:3 mean-motion resonance which redistributed eccentricities and inclinations between the moons. This scenario requires that the original orbit of Hi'iaka was mildly eccentric; we propose that this eccentricity was either primordial or acquired though encounters with other TNOs. Both dynamical stability and our preferred tidal evolution model imply that the moons' masses…
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