# The consequences of planetary migration on the minor bodies of the early   Solar System

**Authors:** Simona Pirani, Anders Johansen, Bertram Bitsch, Alexander J. Mustill,, and Diego Turrini

arXiv: 1902.04591 · 2019-03-27

## TL;DR

This study explores how early planetary migration influenced minor body populations like Jupiter Trojans and Hildas, revealing asymmetries and capture mechanisms consistent with observations, but also highlighting discrepancies in inclination and mass.

## Contribution

It demonstrates that planetary migration causes asymmetries in Trojan populations and captures Hildas, providing new insights into early Solar System dynamics.

## Key findings

- Migration leads to a more populated leading Trojan swarm.
- Hilda group is captured between 5 and 8 au during migration.
- Captured Trojans have higher mass and lower inclinations than current populations.

## Abstract

Pebble accretion is an efficient mechanism able to build up the core of the giant planets within the lifetime of the protoplanetary disc gas-phase. The core grows via this process until the protoplanet reaches its pebble isolation mass and starts to accrete gas. During the growth, the protoplanet undergoes a rapid, large-scale, inward migration due to the interactions with the gaseous protoplanetary disc. In our work, we investigate how this early migration would have affected the minor body populations in our solar system. In particular, we focus on the Jupiter Trojans and the Hildas asteroids. We found that a massive and eccentric Hilda group is captured during the migration from a region between 5 and 8 au and subsequently depleted during the late instability of the giant planets. Our simulations also show that inward migration of the giant planets always produces a Jupiter Trojans' leading swarm more populated than the trailing one, with a ratio comparable to the current observed Trojan asymmetry ratio. The in situ formation of Jupiter, on the other hand, produces symmetric leading/trailing swarms. The reason for the asymmetry is the relative drift between the migrating planet and the particles in the coorbital resonance. The capture happens during the growth of Jupiter's core and Trojan asteroids are afterwards carried along during the giant planet's migration to their final orbits. The asymmetry and eccentricity of the captured Trojans correspond well to observations, but their inclinations are near zero and their total mass is 3-4 orders of magnitude higher than the current population. Future modelling will be needed to understand whether the dynamical evolution of the Trojans over billions of years will raise the inclinations and deplete the masses to observed values.

## Full text

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## Figures

49 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.04591/full.md

## References

103 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.04591/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.04591