Identifying the population of stable ${\nu}_6$ resonant asteroids using large databases
Valerio Carruba, Safwan Aljbaae, Rita de Cassia Domingos, Mariela, Huaman, Bruno Martins

TL;DR
This study uses advanced clustering and machine learning techniques to identify and characterize stable asteroid populations within the ${ u}_6$ secular resonance, revealing new asteroid families and insights into their stability and origins.
Contribution
It introduces novel methods for analyzing large asteroid datasets, identifying new asteroid families within the ${ u}_6$ resonance, including the first young family in a secular resonance.
Findings
Identified the Tiffanykapler family as the first young asteroid family in a secular resonance.
Discovered a potential asteroid family 'resonant halo' around the Tina family.
Largest sample of asteroid proper elements used for this resonance analysis.
Abstract
Large observational surveys, like those that will be conducted at the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, are expected to discover up to one million new asteroids in the first year of operation. This will more than double the database of known asteroids. New methods and techniques will be needed to handle the large influx of data. Here, we tested some of these new methods by studying the population of asteroids on stable orbits inside the secular resonance. This resonance is one of the strongest mechanisms for destabilizing the orbits of main-belt bodies and producing Near-Earth Asteroids (NEAs). Yet, stable orbital configurations where the asteroid pericenter is either aligned or anti-aligned with that of Saturn exist inside the resonance. The population of stable resonators is now the largest population of asteroids in stable orbits inside a secular resonance. Here we…
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