Investigating Gravitational Collapse of a Pebble Cloud to form Transneptunian Binaries
James E. Robinson, Wesley C. Fraser, Alan Fitzsimmons, Pedro Lacerda

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations to explore how gravitational collapse of pebble clouds can form binary systems in the transneptunian region, matching observed properties and expanding understanding of binary formation mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of binary formation via gravitational collapse across a wider mass range than previous studies, including stability and population characteristics of the resulting systems.
Findings
Gravitational collapse efficiently produces bound binary systems.
On average, 1.5 bound systems form per pebble cloud.
Collapse favors formation of equal-sized binaries and systems with small satellites.
Abstract
Context. A large fraction of transneptunian objects are found in binary pairs, ~30% in the cold classical population between ~39 and ~48 AU. Observationally, these binaries generally have components of similar size and colour. Previous work has shown that gravitational collapse of a pebble cloud is an efficient mechanism for producing such systems. Since the discovery of the bi-lobate nature of Arrokoth there is also interest in gravitational collapse as a way to form contact binaries. Aims. Our aim was to investigate formation of binary systems via gravitational collapse, considering a wider range of binary masses than previous studies. We analysed in detail the properties of the bound systems that are formed and compared them to observations. Methods. We performed N-body simulations of gravitational collapse of a pebble cloud using the REBOUND package, with an…
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