Insights on the dynamical history of the Fomalhaut system - Investigating the Fom c hypothesis
Virginie Faramaz, Herv\'e Beust, Jean-Charles Augereau, Paul Kalas,, James R. Graham

TL;DR
This study uses N-body simulations to explore how a hypothetical Fom c could have influenced the highly eccentric orbit of Fom b in the Fomalhaut system, suggesting a recent scattering event and resonance effects.
Contribution
It provides a detailed dynamical scenario involving mean-motion resonances and scattering to explain Fom b's orbit, highlighting the role of Fom c and system migration.
Findings
Mean-motion resonances can delay scattering events.
Fom b likely originated from an inner resonance with Fom c.
Fom c is at least Neptune-Saturn size.
Abstract
The eccentric shape of the debris disk observed around Fomalhaut was first attributed to Fom b, a companion detected near the belt inner-edge, but new constraints on its orbit revealed that it is belt-crossing, highly eccentric , and can hardly account for the shape of the belt. The best scenario to explain this paradox is that there is another massive body in this system, Fom c, which drives the debris disk shape. The resulting planetary system is highly unstable, which hints at a dynamical scenario involving a recent scattering of Fom b on its current orbit, potentially with the putative Fom c. Our goal is to give insights on the probability for Fom b to have been set on its highly eccentric orbit by a close-encounter with the putative Fom c. We aim to study in particular the part played by mean-motion resonances with Fom c, which could have brought Fom b…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Planetary Science and Exploration
