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On the Early In Situ Formation of Pluto's Small Satellites
The formation of Pluto's small satellites - Styx, Nix, Keberos and Hydra -
remains a mystery. Their orbits are nearly circular and are near mean-motion
resonances and nearly coplanar with Charon's orbit. One scenario suggests that
they all formed close to their current locations from a disk of debris that was
ejected from the Charon-forming impact before the tidal evolution of Charon.
The validity of this scenario is tested by performing -body simulations with
the small satellites treated as test particles and Pluto-Charon evolving
tidally from an initial orbit at a few Pluto radii with initial eccentricity
or 0.2. After tidal evolution, the free eccentricities of the test particles are extracted by applying fast Fourier
transformation to the distance between the test particles and the center of
mass of the system and compared with the current eccentricities of the four
small satellites. The only surviving test particles with
matching the eccentricities of the current satellites are those not affected by
mean-motion resonances during the tidal evolution in a model with Pluto's
effective tidal dissipation function and an initial = 0.2
that is damped down rapidly. However, these test particles do not have any
preference to be in or near 4:1, 5:1 and 6:1 resonances with Charon. An
alternative scenario may be needed to explain the formation of Pluto's small
satellites.Comment: 27 pages, including 10 figures, accepted for publication in A
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