Polar orbits around the newly formed Earth-Moon binary system
Abstract
We examine the dynamics and stability of circumbinary particles orbiting around the Earth-Moon binary system. The moon formed close to the Earth (semi-major axis aEM≈ 3\, R) and expanded through tides to its current day semi-major axis (a EM= 60\, R). Circumbinary orbits that are polar or highly inclined to the Earth-Moon orbit are subject to two competing effects: (i) nodal precession about the Earth-Moon eccentricity vector and (ii) Kozai-Lidov oscillations of eccentricity and inclination driven by the Sun. While we find that there are no stable polar orbits around the Earth-Moon orbit with the current day semi-major axis, polar orbits were stable immediately after the formation of the Moon, at the time when there was a lot of debris around the system, up to when the semi-major axis reached about a EM≈ 10\, R. We discuss implications of polar orbits on the evolution of the Earth-Moon system and the possibility of polar orbiting moons around exoplanet-moon binaries.
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