Strong tidal energy dissipation in Saturn at Titan's frequency as an explanation for Iapetus orbit
William Polycarpe, Melaine Saillenfest, Val\'ery Lainey, Alain Vienne,, Beno\^it Noyelles, Nicolas Rambaux

TL;DR
This paper proposes that strong tidal dissipation in Saturn at Titan's frequency caused a past resonance crossing with Iapetus, explaining its current orbital eccentricity and inclination through numerical simulations of the resonance crossing.
Contribution
It introduces a new scenario where high tidal dissipation in Saturn explains Iapetus's orbit via a past resonance crossing with Titan, supported by detailed numerical simulations.
Findings
Resonance crossing can cause chaotic evolution of Iapetus's orbit.
A Saturn Q factor between 100 and 2000 can produce current Iapetus orbit.
Rapid tidal migration prevented Iapetus's ejection 40-800 million years ago.
Abstract
Natural satellite systems present a large variety of orbital configurations in the solar system. While some are clearly the result of known processes, others still have largely unexplained eccentricity and inclination values. Iapetus has a still unexplained 3% orbital eccentricity and its orbital plane is tilted with respect to its local Laplace plane. On the other hand, astrometric measurements of saturnian moons have revealed high tidal migration rates, corresponding to a quality factor Q of Saturn of around 1600 for the mid-sized icy moons. We show how a past crossing of the 5:1 mean motion resonance between Titan and Iapetus may be a plausible scenario to explain Iapetus' orbit. We have carried out numerical simulations of the resonance crossing using an N-Body code as well as using averaged equations of motion. A large span of migration rates were explored for Titan and Iapetus was…
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