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Nov.
13, 2008: NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has taken
the first
visible-light snapshot of a planet circling another star.
Estimated to be no more than three times Jupiter's mass, the
planet, called Fomalhaut b, orbits the bright southern star
Fomalhaut, located 25 light-years away in the constellation
Piscis Australis, or the "Southern Fish."

Above:
Artist's concept of the star Fomalhaut and the Jupiter-type
planet that the Hubble Space Telescope observed. The planet,
called Fomalhaut b, orbits the 200-million-year-old star every
872 years. Credit: ESA, NASA, and L. Calcada (ESO for STScI)
Fomalhaut
has been a candidate for planet hunting ever since an excess
of dust (a telltale sign of planet formation) was discovered
around the star in the early 1980s by NASA's Infrared Astronomy
Satellite, IRAS.
In
2004, the coronagraph in the High Resolution Camera on Hubble's
Advanced Camera for Surveys produced the first-ever resolved
visible-light image of the region around Fomalhaut. (Note:
A coronagraph is a device that can block the bright light
of a central star to reveal faint objects around it.) It clearly
showed a ring of protoplanetary debris approximately 21.5
billion miles across and having a sharp inner edge.
This
large debris disk is similar to the Kuiper Belt, which encircles
the solar system and contains a range of icy bodies from dust
grains to objects the size of dwarf planets, such as Pluto.
Hubble
astronomer Paul Kalas, of the University of California at
Berkeley, and team members proposed in 2005 that the ring
was being gravitationally modified or "shepherded"
by a planet lying between the star and the ring's inner edge.
Now,
Hubble has actually photographed a point source of light lying
1.8 billion miles inside the ring's inner edge. The results
are being reported in the November 14 issue of Science
magazine.
"Our
Hubble observations were incredibly demanding. Fomalhaut b
is 1 billion times fainter than the star. We began this program
in 2001, and our persistence finally paid off," Kalas
says.
Observations
taken 21 months apart by Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys'
coronagraph show that the object is moving along a path around
the star, and is therefore gravitationally bound to it. The
planet is 10.7 billion miles from the star, or about 10 times
the distance of the planet Saturn from our sun.
The
planet is brighter than expected for an object of three Jupiter
masses. One possibility is that it has a Saturn-like ring
of ice and dust reflecting starlight. The ring might eventually
coalesce to form moons. The ring's estimated size is comparable
to the region around Jupiter and its four largest orbiting
satellites.
Right:
This visible-light image from the Hubble shows the newly discovered
planet, Fomalhaut b, orbiting its parent star. [Larger
image]
Kalas
and his team first used Hubble to photograph Fomalhaut in
2004, and made the unexpected discovery of its debris disk.
At the time they noted a few bright sources in the image as
planet candidates. A follow-up image in 2006 showed that one
of the objects had changed position since the 2004 exposure.
The amount of displacement between the two exposures corresponds
to an 872-year-long orbit as calculated from Kepler's laws
of planetary motion.
Future
observations will attempt to see the planet in infrared light
and will look for evidence of water vapor clouds in the atmosphere.
This would yield clues to the evolution of a comparatively
newborn 100-million-year-old planet. Astrometric measurements
of the planet's orbit will provide enough precision to yield
an accurate mass.
NASA's
James Webb Space Telescope, scheduled to launch in 2013 will
be able to make coronagraphic observations of Fomalhaut in
the near- and mid-infrared. Webb will be able to hunt for
other planets in the system and probe the region interior
to the dust ring for structures such as an inner asteroid
belt.
For
more information about this story and the Hubble Space Telescope,
visit: http://www.nasa.gov/hubble
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Editor: Dr.
Tony Phillips | Credit: Science@NASA
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