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Hubble Spots Clues to Missing Exoplanet – New Images Revealed

Hubble Spots Clues to Missing Exoplanet – New Images Revealed
Javier ​Barbuzano 2025-12-18 19:00:00

Two asteroid-sized objects orbiting a famous star have collided, Hubble⁢ Space Telescope ​images suggest. The collision​ provides a rare‌ look at the violent process of planetary ‌construction around ‌a young star — similar to collisions that probably shaped our own solar system, astronomers⁢ report December 18 in Science.

“It’s the first time​ we’ve⁤ ever‍ seen colliding planetesimals outside of our own solar system,” says Jason Wang, an astronomer ⁣at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill. The event also solves a long-standing ⁣mystery about a disappearing exoplanet.

The⁤ colliding objects, suspected planet building blocks⁣ called​ planetesimals, slammed into each other ⁢in ‌the debris disk ‍of Fomalhaut, a ⁤star ‍located just 25 light-years from Earth. Fomalhaut is‌ well-known for its prominent ring of dust⁣ and rubble, a region where planet formation ⁣is ‌actively⁢ happening.

The impact released a ⁤vast cloud of dust, appearing like a bright blob in Hubble images. From the size of this⁣ cloud, researchers estimate that the impacting ⁣planetesimals⁤ were around 30 kilometers in diameter, slightly‌ larger than the Martian ‌moon, Phobos.

The blob’s existence is enticing as it could solve a cold case of the vanishing exoplanet Fomalhaut b.The planet,discovered​ in 2008,was hailed ‍as the‌ first planet orbiting​ a star other ‍than ‍the sun that was directly imaged ‌in visible ⁤light. But then, ​ the planet disappeared. Follow-up observations failed to ⁢locate it,leading‌ scientists to doubt its existence.

The new​ Hubble data offer another ​hypothesis.Like‌ this​ new blob, Fomalhaut b was probably not a planet at all, but rather ‌an expanding cloud ⁣of dust produced ⁣by a previous ‌collision between planetesimals. The new cloud‌ looks similar to Fomalhaut ‍b when it was first discovered. And the “exoplanet” faded and⁣ expanded over ‌time, until ​being‌ barely visible.That trajectory ⁤could offer clues⁣ to the new blob’s fate.

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This Hubble Space ‌Telescope​ composite image shows a new dust cloud‌ around the star ⁢Fomalhaut (center),‌ produced‍ by a crash between asteroid-sized objects. the ⁢inset marks ⁢the presence of the new cloud, tagged as cs2. ‍The tag cs1 is ‌the ⁤location of the former purported planet Fomalhaut b, which now is considered a dissipating dust ⁢cloud, barely distinguishable from the rest of the disk. The dates‌ indicate when the images of each blob used in the composite were⁤ acquired.Paul ​Kalas/UC berkeley, NASA, ESA

When Wang and colleagues first⁤ spotted the new blob, “we were kind of‍ confused‍ at first, like, you know, what ​is this thing? Is this real?” he says. ​“It took us a while to kind of ⁢match all those lines of ​evidence.”

When the evidence​ did ⁤come together,‌ astronomers got more than they ‍bargained for ​in studying the ‍buildup of planetary systems.

“What’s cool about this paper is that​ for the first time ever we​ are seeing one of these ‌disks change⁢ over time,” says astrophysicist Tim Pearce of the University of Warwick in Coventry, England, who wasn’t involved in the study. That’s ​unusual in the field of protoplanetary disks,where scientists usually observe ‍structures that “basically ‌look the same for a human lifetime,”​ he says. By seeing ‍these events in action, astronomers can test their ideas about how planets are born, confirming that large-scale collisions are a frequent part of the birth of a solar system.

While telescopes can‌ detect the⁣ dust in ‍these disks, larger bodies like asteroids or dwarf planets are typically too dim and cool to ‍be seen ​directly. this impact reveals the⁣ presence of ‌these bodies and the size of the cloud offers an ⁢indirect way to gauge their size. Detecting two⁤ such⁤ events within a 20-year window allows researchers to begin establishing a timescale for how often these massive impacts ⁢occur, which in turn ​is a proxy for their abundance, because⁤ with more objects in orbit, collisions ⁢are more likely.

The⁤ researchers​ intend to continue ​tracking the Fomalhaut system to study the evolution of the dust ​cloud. Though,the⁢ aging Hubble Space​ Telescope has become less reliable. A failure of one of its‌ pointing gyroscopes in 2024 has limited its ability to steadily observe Fomalhaut. Fortunately, ‍the james Webb Space Telescope is also capable of observing the system, providing a new way to monitor the debris disk and possibly⁢ witness new impacts as they happen.

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