The origin of long-lived asteroids in the 2:1 mean-motion resonance with Jupiter
O. Chrenko, M. Bro\v{z}, D. Nesvorn\'y, K. Tsiganis, D. K. Skoulidou

TL;DR
This study investigates the origins of long-lived asteroids in the 2:1 resonance with Jupiter, combining dynamical modeling and collisional evolution to propose that they were captured during planetary migration rather than being primordial.
Contribution
It demonstrates that long-lived resonant asteroids likely originated from capture during planetary migration, not from primordial sources, using updated models and the Yarkovsky effect.
Findings
Dynamical depletion of island A is faster than B.
Long-lived asteroids were captured during planetary migration.
Primordial asteroids are unlikely to account for the current population.
Abstract
The 2:1 mean-motion resonance with Jupiter harbours two distinct groups of asteroids. The short-lived population is known to be a transient group sustained in steady state by the Yarkovsky semimajor axis drift. The long-lived asteroids, however, can exhibit dynamical lifetimes comparable to . They reside near two isolated islands of the phase space denoted and , with an uneven population ratio . The orbits of -island asteroids are predominantly highly inclined, compared to island . The size-frequency distribution is steep but the orbital distribution lacks any evidence of a collisional cluster. These observational constraints are somewhat puzzling and therefore the origin of the long-lived asteroids has not been explained so far. With the aim to provide a viable explanation, we first…
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