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e-Article

Optical Images of an Exosolar Planet 25 Light Years from Earth
Document Type
Journal Article
Author
Source
Science, vol. 322, no. 5906, November 28, 2008, pp. 1345-1348; 322; 5906
Subject
99 GENERAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BRIGHTNESS
DETECTION
DIMENSIONS
DUSTS
ORIGIN
PLANETS
SATELLITES
STARS
TELESCOPES
WAVELENGTHS
Language
English
ISSN
0193-4511
Abstract
Fomalhaut is a bright star 7.7 parsec (25 light years) from Earth that harbors a belt of cold dust with a structure consistent with gravitational sculpting by an orbiting planet. Here, we present optical observations of an exoplanet candidate, Fomalhaut b. In the plane of the belt, Fomalhaut b lies approximately 119 astronomical units (AU) from the star, and within 18 AU of the dust belt. We detect counterclockwise orbital motion using Hubble Space Telescope observations separated by 1.73 years. Dynamical models of the interaction between the planet and the belt indicate that the planet's mass is at most three times that of Jupiter for the belt to avoid gravitational disruption. The flux detected at 0.8 {micro}m is also consistent with that of a planet with mass no greater than a few times that of Jupiter. The brightness at 0.6 {micro}m and the lack of detection at longer wavelengths suggest that the detected flux may include starlight reflected off a circumplanetary disk, with dimension comparable to the orbits of the Galilean satellites. We also observed variability of unknown origin at 0.6 {micro}m.