Secular Resonance Between Iapetus and the Giant Planets
Matija \'Cuk, Luke Dones, David Nesvorn\'y, and Kevin J. Walsh

TL;DR
This paper investigates a multi-Myr secular resonance involving Iapetus and the giant planets, revealing complex long-term orbital dynamics influenced by planetary and Saturn's spin axis interactions.
Contribution
It identifies a specific secular resonance involving Iapetus and the $g_5$ mode, and analyzes its potential formation and implications for Saturn's orbital history.
Findings
Iapetus's eccentricity exhibits multi-Myr oscillations.
The resonance involves the argument $ ext{ extpi}- ext{ extpi}_{g5}+ ext{ extOmega}- ext{ extOmega}_{eq}$.
Capture into the resonance is a low-probability event.
Abstract
Using numerical integrations, we find that the orbital eccentricity of Saturn's moon Iapetus undergoes prominent multi-Myr oscillations. We identify the responsible resonant argument to be , with the terms being the longitudes of pericenter of Iapetus and planetary secular mode , Iapetus's longitude of the node and Saturn's equinox. We find that this argument currently (on a ~yr timescale) appears to librate with a very large amplitude. On longer timescales, the behavior of this resonant angle is strongly dependent on the resonant interaction between Saturn's spin axis and the planetary mode , with long-term secular resonance being possible if Saturn's equinox is librating relative to the node of the eigenmode. We present analytical estimates of the dependence of the resonant argument on the orbital elements of Iapetus. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistorical Astronomy and Related Studies · Historical, Religious, and Philosophical Studies · Historical and Architectural Studies
