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The Orbital Evolution of Near-Earth Asteroid 3753

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© 1998. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Paul A. Wiegert et al 1998 AJ 115 2604 DOI 10.1086/300358

1538-3881/115/6/2604

Abstract

     Asteroid 3753 (1986 TO) is in a 1:1 mean motion resonance with Earth, on a complex horseshoe-type orbit. Numerical experiments are performed to determine its medium-term stability and the means by which it may have entered its current orbit. Though 3753 moves primarily under the influence of the Sun and Earth, the giant planets (and Jupiter especially) play an important role by influencing, through torque-induced precession, the position of the asteroid's nodes. Variations in the nodal distance strongly affect the interaction of 3753 with Earth and may change or destroy the horseshoe-like behavior currently seen. This precession of the nodes provides a mechanism for placing minor planets into, or removing them from, a variety of horseshoe-type orbits. The chaotic nature of this asteroid's orbit makes predictions difficult on timescales longer than its Lyapunov time (∼150 yr); therefore, ensembles of particles on orbits near that of 3753 are considered. The asteroid has a high probability of passing close to Venus and/or Mars on 104 yr timescales, pointing to a dynamical age much shorter than that of the solar system.

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10.1086/300358