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Origin and Evolution of the Unusual Object 1996 PW: Asteroids from the Oort Cloud?

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Published 1997 September 18 © 1997. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Paul R. Weissman and Harold F. Levison 1997 ApJ 488 L133 DOI 10.1086/310940

1538-4357/488/2/L133

Abstract

The unusual object 1996 PW was discovered on 1996 August 9 by the Near-Earth Asteroid Tracking automated search camera operating from Haleakala in Hawaii. Although asteroidal in appearance, it was soon determined that the object is in a near-parabolic orbit similar to that of a long-period comet. No object that was not an active comet has ever been discovered on such an eccentric orbit. The discovery of 1996 PW prompted us to examine and evaluate its possible origins, including the intriguing possibility that it is an asteroid from the Oort cloud. Current models for the formation of the Oort cloud argue that most of the material there should be from the Uranus-Neptune region and thus cometary, not asteroidal, in composition. We better quantify these models and show that ~1% of the Oort cloud population should be asteroids. We find that 1996 PW has almost certainly been a resident of the Oort cloud. However, we find it equally likely that 1996 PW is an extinct comet or an asteroid. Although not conclusive, our results represent a significant change in our understanding of the Oort cloud, because they suggest that the ejection process sampled (1) material from as close to the Sun as the asteroid belt in the primordial solar nebula and hence (2) much warmer formation temperatures than previously thought. This diverse sample is preserved in the Oort cloud.

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10.1086/310940