The color-magnitude distribution of Hilda asteroids: Comparison with Jupiter Trojans
Ian Wong, Michael E. Brown

TL;DR
This study analyzes the magnitude and color distribution of Hilda asteroids, revealing bimodal surface compositions and supporting a common origin with Jupiter Trojans, consistent with Solar System evolution models.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the color bimodality and magnitude distribution of Hilda asteroids, comparing them with Jupiter Trojans to support a shared origin hypothesis.
Findings
Hilda asteroids exhibit a strong bimodal color distribution.
Collisional fragments of Hildas are predominantly bluer.
Hildas and Trojans have comparable color distributions.
Abstract
Current models of Solar System evolution posit that the asteroid populations in resonance with Jupiter are comprised of objects scattered inward from the outer Solar System during a period of dynamical instability. In this paper, we present a new analysis of the absolute magnitude and optical color distribution of Hilda asteroids, which lie in the 3:2 mean motion resonance with Jupiter, with the goal of comparing the bulk properties with previously published results from an analogous study of Jupiter Trojans. We report an updated power law fit of the Hilda magnitude distribution through H=14. Using photometric data listed in the Sloan Moving Object Catalog, we confirm the previously-reported strong bimodality in visible spectral slope distribution, indicative of two sub-populations with differing surface compositions. When considering collisional families separately, we find that…
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