An updated estimate of the number of Jupiter-family comets using a simple fading law
R. Brasser, J.-H. Wang

TL;DR
This study estimates the current number of visible Jupiter-family comets using observational data and a simple fading law, supporting the hypothesis that they originate from the scattered disc and refining population estimates.
Contribution
It provides a robust estimate of visible JFCs and introduces a simple fading law to fit their distribution, improving understanding of their origins and population size.
Findings
Approximately 300 active JFCs with D>2.3 km and q<2.5 AU.
Scattered disc population estimated at 6 billion objects.
The ratio of Oort cloud to scattered disc objects is about 13.
Abstract
It has long been hypothesised that the Jupiter-family comets (JFCs) come from the scattered disc, an unstable planetesimal population beyond Neptune. This viewpoint has been widely accepted, but a few issues remain, the most prominent of which are the total number of visible JFCs with a perihelion distance q<2.5 AU and the corresponding number of objects in the scattered disc. In this work we give a robust estimate of the number of visible JFCs with q<2.5 AU and diameter D>2.3 km based on recent observational data. This is combined with numerical simulations that use a simple fading law applied to JFCs that come close to the Sun. For this we numerically evolve thousands of comets from the scattered disc through the realm of the giant planets and keep track of their number of perihelion passages with perihelion distance q<2.5 AU, below which the activity is supposed to increase…
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