Author
Kwiecinski, J
Kovacs, A
Krause, A
Planella, F
Van Gorder, R
Journal title
International Journal of Bifurcation and Chaos
DOI
10.1142/S0218127418300136
Issue
5
Volume
25
Last updated
2022-03-05T12:02:45.22+00:00
Abstract
The discovery of Pluto’s small moons in the last decade has brought attention to the dynamics of the dwarf planet’s satellites. With such systems in mind, we study a planar N-body system in which all the bodies are point masses, except for a single rigid body. We then present a reduced model consisting of a planar N-body problem with the rigid body treated as a 1D continuum (i.e. the body is treated as a rod with an arbitrary mass distribution). Such a model provides a good approximation to highly asymmetric geometries, such as the recently observed interstellar asteroid ‘Oumuamua, but is also amenable to analysis. We analytically demonstrate the existence of homoclinic chaos in the case where one of the orbits is nearly circular by way of the Melnikov method, and give numerical evidence for chaos when the orbits are more complicated. We show that the extent of chaos in parameter space is strongly tied to the deviations from a purely circular orbit. These results suggest that chaos is ubiquitous in many-body problems when one or more of the rigid bodies exhibits nonspherical and highly asymmetric geometries. The excitation of chaotic rotations does not appear to require tidal dissipation, obliquity variation, or orbital resonance. Such dynamics give a possible explanation for routes to chaotic dynamics observed in N-body systems such as the Pluto system where some of the bodies are highly nonspherical.
Symplectic ID
843418
Publication type
Journal Article
Publication date
1 May 2018
Please contact us with feedback and comments about this page. Created on 21 Apr 2018 - 17:30.