Potential Jupiter-Family Comet Contamination of the Main Asteroid Belt
Henry H. Hsieh, Nader Haghighipour

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations to show that a small percentage of Jupiter-family comets can temporarily enter the main asteroid belt, impacting our understanding of the belt's composition and origins.
Contribution
It demonstrates that some comet-like objects can reach main-belt orbits temporarily, challenging the reliability of Tisserand parameter as an orbit classifier.
Findings
A few percent of comet-like objects reach main-belt orbits in simulations.
Estimated 0.1-1% of real JFCs may temporarily enter the main belt.
Low-eccentricity, low-inclination main-belt comets are better for tracing primordial ice.
Abstract
We present the results of "snapshot" numerical integrations of test particles representing comet-like and asteroid-like objects in the inner solar system aimed at investigating the short-term dynamical evolution of objects close to the dynamical boundary between asteroids and comets as defined by the Tisserand parameter with respect to Jupiter, T_J (i.e., T_J=3). As expected, we find that T_J for individual test particles is not always a reliable indicator of initial orbit types. Furthermore, we find that a few percent of test particles with comet-like starting elements (i.e., similar to Jupiter-family comets) reach main-belt-like orbits (at least temporarily) during our 2 Myr integrations, even without the inclusion of non-gravitational forces, apparently via a combination of gravitational interactions with the terrestrial planets and temporary trapping by mean-motion resonances with…
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