The active centaur 2020 MK4
C. de la Fuente Marcos, R. de la Fuente Marcos, J. Licandro, M., Serra-Ricart, S. Martino, J. de Leon, F. Chaudry, M. R. Alarcon

TL;DR
This study presents photometric observations of centaur 2020 MK4, revealing a comet-like coma, neutral surface colors, and chaotic orbital evolution, suggesting it shares similarities with comet 29P and may be ejected from the Solar System.
Contribution
First detailed photometric and dynamical analysis of centaur 2020 MK4, highlighting its cometary activity and chaotic orbital behavior, expanding understanding of active centaurs.
Findings
2020 MK4 has a faint, compact coma.
Surface colors are similar to the Sun.
Orbital evolution is highly chaotic, with possible ejection from the Solar System.
Abstract
Context. Centaurs go around the Sun between the orbits of Jupiter and Neptune. Only a fraction of the known centaurs have been found to display comet-like features. Comet 29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 1 is the most remarkable active centaur. It orbits the Sun just beyond Jupiter in a nearly circular path. Only a handful of known objects follow similar trajectories. Aims. We present photometric observations of 2020 MK4, a recently found centaur with an orbit not too different from that of 29P, and we perform a preliminary exploration of its dynamical evolution. Methods. We analyzed broadband Cousins R and Sloan g', r', and i' images of 2020 MK4 acquired with the Jacobus Kapteyn Telescope and the IAC80 telescope to search for cometary-like activity, and to derive its surface colors and size. Its orbital evolution was studied using direct N-body simulations. Results. Centaur 2020 MK4 is…
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