OSSOS. IV. DISCOVERY OF A DWARF PLANET CANDIDATE IN THE 9:2 RESONANCE WITH NEPTUNE

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TitreOSSOS. IV. DISCOVERY OF A DWARF PLANET CANDIDATE IN THE 9:2 RESONANCE WITH NEPTUNE
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuteursBannister MT, Alexandersen M, Benecchi SD, Chen Y-T, Delsanti A, Fraser WC, Gladman BJ, Granvik M, Grundy WM, Guilbert-Lepoutre A, Gwyn SDJ, Ip W-H, Jakubik M, R. Jones L, Kaib N, Kavelaars J.J, Lacerda P, Lawler S, Lehner MJ, Lin HWen, Lykawka PSofia, Marsset M, Murray-Clay R, Noll KS, Parker A, Petit J-M, Pike RE, Rousselot P, Schwamb ME, Shankman C, Veres P, Vernazza P, Volk K, Wang S-Y, Weryk R
JournalASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
Volume152
Pagination212
Date PublishedDEC
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0004-6256
Mots-clésKuiper belt objects: individual (2015 RR245)
Résumé

We report the discovery and orbit of a new dwarf planet candidate, 2015 RR245, by the Outer Solar System Origins Survey (OSSOS). The orbit of 2015 RR245 is eccentric (e = 0.586), with a semimajor axis near 82 au, yielding a perihelion distance of 34 au. 2015 RR245 has g - r = 0.59 +/- 0.11 and absolute magnitude H-r = 3.6 +/- 0.1; for an assumed albedo of p(V) = 12%, the object has a diameter of similar to 670. km. Based on astrometric measurements from OSSOS and Pan-STARRS1, we find that 2015 RR245 is securely trapped on ten-megayear timescales in the 9: 2 mean-motion resonance with Neptune. It is the first trans-Neptunian object (TNO) identified in this resonance. On hundred-megayear. timescales, particles in 2015 RR245-like orbits depart and sometimes return to the resonance, indicating that 2015 RR245 likely forms part of the long-lived metastable population of distant TNOs that drift between resonance sticking and actively scattering via gravitational encounters with Neptune. The discovery of a 9: 2 TNO stresses the role of resonances in the long-term evolution of objects in the scattering disk. and reinforces the view that distant resonances are heavily populated in the current solar system. This object further motivates detailed modeling of the transient sticking population.

DOI10.3847/0004-6256/152/6/212