A pair of Jovian Trojans at the L4 Lagrange point
Timothy R. Holt, David Vokrouhlick\'y, David Nesvorn\'y, Miroslav, Bro\v{z}, Jonathan Horner

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of the first asteroid pair in the Jovian Trojans, providing insights into their formation and evolution, and offering a catalog of Trojan proper elements for future research.
Contribution
The discovery of a Jovian Trojan asteroid pair and the analysis of its age and formation mechanisms, filling a gap in the understanding of Trojan population dynamics.
Findings
First Jovian Trojan asteroid pair discovered
Pair is at least 360 million years old
Supports binary dissociation or rotation fission formation hypotheses
Abstract
Asteroid pairs, two objects that are not gravitationally bound to one another, but share a common origin, have been discovered in the Main belt and Hungaria populations. Such pairs are of major interest, as the study of their evolution under a variety of dynamical influences can indicate the time since the pair was created. To date, no asteroid pairs have been found in the Jovian Trojans, despite the presence of several binaries and collisional families in the population. The search for pairs in the Jovian Trojan population is of particular interest, given the importance of the Trojans as tracers of planetary migration during the Solar system's youth. Here we report a discovery of the first pair, (258656) 2002~ES and 2013~CC, in the Jovian Trojans. The two objects are approximately the same size and are located very close to the L4 Lagrange point. Using numerical…
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