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For the computation of highly accurate asteroid proper elements the
numerical procedures involved, in particular the numerical
integration, must also be as accurate and reliable as possible. For
the purpose of our project, however, the choice of the integrator and
the tuning of the parameters controlling the performance had to
satisfy also another, practically opposite requirement, namely
computational speed. This because we were to integrate thousands of
orbits, computing not only the differential equations of motion, but
also the corresponding variational equations to estimate maximum
Lyapunov Characteristic Exponents (LCE); and this for a time span long
enough to enable an accurate and efficient averaging out of both the
short and the long-periodic effects.
For all these reasons we decided to make use of the ORBIT9 integrator
(version 9c), developed by one of us (AM), employing different
dynamical models in different regions of the asteroid main belt. For
the integrations we present in this paper (of the orbits of asteroids
located in the outer main belt) we used only four outer planets as
perturbing bodies, applying the ``barycentric correction'' to the
initial conditions in order to account for the major part of the
indirect effect of inner planets.
The ORBIT9 propagator-interpolator is described elsewhere (e.g. Milani
and Nobili [1988]); it uses as starter a symplectic single
step method (implicit Runge-Kutta-Gauss), and a multi-step predictor
performs most of the propagation; the latter has a constant stepsize
h and uses only one evaluation of the right hand side of the
equations of motion for each step. The states at the discrete steps
are not interpolated, because the filter input interval is
automatically selected to be a multiple of the step h. The latter
is selected in an optimum way by using the estimates of the truncation
error from Milani and Nobili [1988]. However, we have
improved the algorithm for this stepsize selection by replacing the
value of e in the corresponding equations by the value of
(e2 +
sinI2)1/2, which is more predictive of the long term behavior of
the eccentricity. In this way a suitable stepsize is computed for each
asteroid. Then the input catalog is sorted by the stepsize and
integrated in batches with similar stepsizes, by using the minimum
of the recommended stepsizes.
We propagated the orbits of all the asteroids in the input catalog
from the present state until 2 My in the past. Then proper elements
were computed as discussed in Sections 2.3 and
2.4, and tested for stability in time as discussed
there. For most asteroids the results turned out to be satisfactory;
for the minority for which there were indications of instability and/or
strong chaotic motion we performed a further integration from the
initial state to 10 Myr in the future. The final proper elements
catalog has been produced by joining the output files and replacing
the 2 My results with the 10 My ones when available.
Next: 2.2 Digital filtering
Up: 2. Synthetic theory
Previous: 2. Synthetic theory
Andrea Milani
2000-10-03