Evidence for Color Dichotomy in the Primordial Neptunian Trojan Population
Hsing Wen Lin, David W. Gerdes, Stephanie J. Hamilton, Fred C. Adams,, Gary M. Bernstein, Masao Sako, Pedro Bernadinelli, Douglas Tucker, Sahar, Allam, Juliette C. Becker, Tali Khain, Larissa Markwardt, Kyle Franson, T. M., C. Abbott, J. Annis, S. Avila, D. Brooks

TL;DR
This study discovers ultra-red Neptunian Trojans, including the first with high inclination, providing insights into their origins and challenging existing formation models of the Solar System.
Contribution
It reports the first ultra-red, high-inclination Neptunian Trojan and estimates the population ratio, offering new clues about their formation and evolution.
Findings
Discovery of ultra-red Neptunian Trojan 2013 VX30.
Estimated 162 +/- 73 Neptunian Trojans with Hr < 10.
Blue-to-red Trojan ratio exceeds 17:1.
Abstract
In the current model of early Solar System evolution, the stable members of the Jovian and Neptunian Trojan populations were captured into resonance from the leftover reservoir of planetesimals during the outward migration of the giant planets. As a result, both Jovian and Neptunian Trojans share a common origin with the primordial disk population, whose other surviving members constitute today's trans-Neptunian object (TNO) populations. The cold classical TNOs are ultra-red, while the dynamically excited "hot" population of TNOs contains a mixture of ultra-red and blue objects. In contrast, Jovian and Neptunian Trojans are observed to be blue. While the absence of ultra-red Jovian Trojans can be readily explained by the sublimation of volatile material from their surfaces due to the high flux of solar radiation at 5AU, the lack of ultra-red Neptunian Trojans presents both a puzzle and…
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