Peculiar orbits and asymmetries in extreme trans-Neptunian space
C. de la Fuente Marcos, R. de la Fuente Marcos

TL;DR
This paper investigates the structure and possible groupings of extreme trans-Neptunian objects using machine learning and orbital analysis, revealing potential dynamical clusters and asymmetries that suggest external influences in the distant Solar System.
Contribution
It introduces a novel application of machine learning to identify potential populations among ETNOs and analyzes their orbital interactions and asymmetries, providing new insights into this remote Solar System region.
Findings
ETNOs may belong to four distinct populations.
41% of ETNOs have close mutual nodal distances, indicating possible past interactions.
Significant asymmetry in orbital pair distributions suggests external perturbations.
Abstract
It is still an open question how the Solar system is structured beyond 100 au from the Sun. Our understanding of this vast region remains very limited and only recently we have become aware of the existence there of a group of enigmatic bodies known as the extreme trans-Neptunian objects (ETNOs) that have large orbits with perihelia beyond the orbit of Neptune. Four ETNOs -- Sedna, Leleakuhonua, 2012 VP113, and 2013 SY99 -- have perihelia beyond 50 au. The study of the ETNOs may provide much needed information on how this remote region is organized. Here, we apply machine-learning techniques to the sample of 40 known ETNOs to identify statistically significant clusters that may signal the presence of true dynamical groupings and study the distribution of the mutual nodal distances of the known ETNOs that measure how close two orbits can get to each other. Machine-learning techniques…
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