ArXiv TLDR

The steady-state population of Earth's co-orbitals of lunar provenance

🐦 Tweet
2604.13296

Elisa Maria Alessi, Robert Jedicke

astro-ph.EP

TLDR

This paper calculates the steady-state population and characteristics of Earth's co-orbitals originating from lunar ejecta, predicting over 70 objects >10m.

Key contributions

  • Calculates the steady-state size-frequency distribution of Earth's co-orbitals originating from the Moon.
  • Predicts over 70 lunar-provenance co-orbitals larger than 10m in diameter.
  • Classifies co-orbital regimes (quasi-satellite, horseshoe, tadpole) and transition probabilities.
  • Compares lunar co-orbitals to main belt objects, noting differences in orbital characteristics.

Why it matters

This research provides the first calculation of the steady-state population of Earth's co-orbitals originating from the Moon. Understanding these objects is crucial for refining crater scaling relations and has implications for future asteroid mining ventures, as they represent accessible targets.

Original Abstract

The population of natural objects in a 1:1 mean motion resonance with Earth are known as Earth's co-orbitals. Main belt objects can dynamically evolve into Earth co-orbitals but taxonomic studies of some of them have suggested that they are more likely to be lunar material. While it has long been known that lunar ejecta can achieve Earth co-orbital status, in this work we calculate their expected steady-state size-frequency distribution from the impact rate of asteroids and comets on the Moon's surface, the ejecta's size-frequency and speed distribution, and dynamical integration of the particles for millions of years, among other factors. We also classify known and synthetic co-orbitals by their regime (quasi-satellite, horseshoe, tadpole, or compound) and compute the probability of transitions between them. Our nominal solution predicts that there are $\gtrsim 70$ Earth co-orbitals in the steady-state population larger than $10$ m in diameter with a lunar provenance but there are orders-of-magnitude systematic uncertainty on the value. We used NEOMOD3 to calculate that about 1600 are expected in the co-orbital population with a main belt provenance and they have higher eccentricity and inclination than those from the Moon. New taxonomic classifications for more Earth co-orbitals will reduce the uncertainties on e.g. crater scaling relations that will, in turn, reduce the uncertainties in the calculation of the steady-state population of Earth's co-orbitals with a lunar origin. The mineralogy and abundance of Earth's co-orbitals is also of interest to commercial asteroid mining ventures because they are the lowest $Δv$ targets in the asteroid population.

📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest

Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.