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Plutino
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=== Origin === It is thought that the objects that are currently in mean [[orbital resonance]]s with Neptune initially followed a variety of independent heliocentric paths. As Neptune migrated outward early in the Solar System's history (see [[Kuiper belt#Origin|origins of the Kuiper belt]]), the bodies it approached would have been scattered; during this process, some of them would have been captured into resonances.<ref name="Malhotra1995">{{cite journal |last1=Malhotra |title=The Origin of Pluto's Orbit: Implications for the Solar System Beyond Neptune |journal=Astronomical Journal |volume=110 |year=1995 |page=420 |arxiv = astro-ph/9504036 |bibcode = 1995AJ....110..420M |doi = 10.1086/117532 |first1= Renu|s2cid= 10622344}}</ref> The 3:2 resonance is a low-order resonance and is thus the strongest and most stable among all resonances.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Almeida|first1=A.J.C|last2=Peixinho|first2=N.|last3=Correia|first3=A.C.M. |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/45876510|title=Neptune Trojans & Plutinos: Colors, sizes, dynamics, & their possible collisions|date=December 2009|journal=Astronomy & Astrophysics|doi=10.1051/0004-6361/200911943|volume=508|issue=2|pages=1021β1030|access-date=2019-07-20|arxiv=0910.0865|s2cid=53772214}}</ref> This is the primary reason it has a larger population than the other Neptunian resonances encountered in the Kuiper Belt. The cloud of low-inclination bodies beyond 40 [[Astronomical unit|AU]] is the [[Classical Kuiper belt object|cubewano]] family, while bodies with higher [[Orbital eccentricity|eccentricities]] (0.05 to 0.34) and [[Semi-major and semi-minor axes|semimajor axes]] close to the 3:2 Neptune resonance are primarily plutinos.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QpcKesJwp28C&pg=PA411|first=John S.|publisher=Academic Press|department=Centaurs & Trans-Neptunian Objects|last=Lewis|isbn=012446744X |title=Physics & Chemistry of the Solar System|date=2004|pages=409β412|access-date=2019-07-21}}</ref>
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