Debiased orbit and absolute-magnitude distributions for near-Earth objects
Mikael Granvik, Alessandro Morbidelli, Robert Jedicke, Bryce Bolin,, William Bottke, Edward Beshore, David Vokrouhlicky, David Nesvorny, Patrick, Michel

TL;DR
This paper develops a new four-dimensional model of near-Earth object populations, debiasing their orbit and magnitude distributions, and identifies primary source regions, improving accuracy over previous models.
Contribution
It introduces a more realistic, source-specific, four-dimensional NEO population model that accounts for variable magnitude slopes and multiple source regions, calibrated with recent survey data.
Findings
Predicts approximately 962 NEOs with H<17.75
Identifies the main source regions as the $ u_6$ and 3:1J resonances
Model results align with recent estimates in the literature
Abstract
The debiased absolute-magnitude and orbit distributions as well as source regions for near-Earth objects (NEOs) provide a fundamental frame of reference for studies of individual NEOs and more complex population-level questions. We present a new four-dimensional model of the NEO population that describes debiased steady-state distributions of semimajor axis, eccentricity, inclination, and absolute magnitude in the range . The modeling approach improves upon the methodology originally developed by Bottke et al. (2000; Science 288, 2190-2194) in that it is, for example, based on more realistic orbit distributions and uses source-specific absolute-magnitude distributions that allow for a power-law slope that varies with . We divide the main asteroid belt into six different entrance routes or regions (ER) to the NEO region: the , 3:1J, 5:2J and 2:1J resonance…
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