Barrel Instability in Binary Asteroids
Matija \'Cuk, Seth A. Jacobson, and Kevin J. Walsh

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new rotational state called 'barrel instability' in binary asteroid secondaries, which affects their rotation and the evolution of their orbits, expanding understanding beyond traditional synchronous and chaotic states.
Contribution
The study identifies and characterizes a novel intermediate rotational state, 'barrel instability,' in irregularly-shaped binary asteroid secondaries through numerical simulations.
Findings
Barrel instability involves slow rolling along the secondary's long axis.
Eccentricity, separation, and shape influence the rotational state.
Barrel instability can suppress the BYORP effect.
Abstract
Most close-in planetary satellites are in synchronous rotation, which is usually the stable end-point of tidal despinning. Saturn's moon Hyperion is a notable exception by having a chaotic rotation. Hyperion's dynamical state is a consequence of its high eccentricity and its highly prolate shape (Wisdom et al. 1984). As many binary asteroids also have elongated secondaries, chaotic rotation is expected for moons in eccentric binaries (\'Cuk and Nesvorn\'y, 2010), and a minority of asteroidal secondaries may be in that state (Pravec et al. 2016). The question of secondary rotation is also important for the action of the BYORP effect, which can quickly evolve orbits of synchronous (but not non-synchronous) secondaries (\'Cuk and Burns, 2005). Here we report results of a large set of short numerical simulations which indicate that, apart from synchronous and classic chaotic rotation,…
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