A carefully characterised and tracked Trans-Neptunian survey, the size-distribution of the Plutinos and the number of Neptunian Trojans
Mike Alexandersen, Brett Gladman, J.J. Kavelaars, Jean-Marc Petit,, Stephen Gwyn, Cory Shankman

TL;DR
This study presents a detailed survey of Trans-Neptunian Objects, revealing a consistent deficit of small objects across multiple populations, and provides new estimates for the populations of Plutinos and Neptunian Trojans, suggesting complex formation and capture histories.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive survey that characterizes the size-distribution of TNO populations, revealing a shared deficit of small objects and providing new population estimates.
Findings
Detected a deficit of D<100 km objects in Plutinos and Neptunian Trojans.
Revealed that Plutinos favor a divot in size-distribution, not a single power-law.
Estimated populations of Plutinos and Neptunian Trojans with uncertainties.
Abstract
The Trans-Neptunian Objects (TNOs) may preserve evidence of planet building in their orbital and size-distributions. While all populations show steep size-distributions for large objects, recently relative deficit of Neptunian Trojans and scattering objects with diameters were detected. We have investigated this deficit with a 32 square degree survey, detecting 77 TNOs to a limiting -band magnitude of 24.6. Our Plutinos sample (18 objects in 3:2 mean motion resonance with Neptune) also shows a deficit of objects. We reject a single power-law size-distribution and find that the Plutinos favour a divot. The Plutinos are thus added the list of populations with a deficit of objects. The fact that three independent samples of three different populations show this trend suggests that it is a real feature, possibly shared by all…
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