Fomalhaut b as a Dust Cloud: Frequent Collisions within the Fomalhaut Disk
S. M. Lawler, S. Greenstreet, B. Gladman

TL;DR
This paper proposes that Fomalhaut b is a transient dust cloud resulting from recent catastrophic collisions of planetesimals in the debris disk, supported by collisional probability simulations indicating frequent disruptive events.
Contribution
It introduces a collisional model explaining Fomalhaut b as a dust cloud from planetesimal collisions, suggesting recent dynamical instability in the system.
Findings
High collision rate of ~100 km bodies in the disk
Fomalhaut b likely a transient dust cloud from recent collisions
Predicted future appearance or fading of Fomalhaut b
Abstract
The planet candidate Fomalhaut b is bright in optical light but undetected in longer wavelengths, requiring a large, reflective dust cloud. The most recent observations find an extremely eccentric orbit (e ~ 0.8), indicating that Fomalhaut b cannot be the planet that is constraining the system's eccentric debris ring. An irregular satellite swarm around a super-Earth has been proposed, however, explaining the well-constrained debris ring requires an additional planet on an orbit that crosses that of the putative super-Earth. This paper expands upon a second theory: Fomalhaut b is a transient dust cloud produced by a catastrophic collision between planetesimals in the disk. We perform collisional probability simulations of the Fomalhaut debris disk based on the structure of our Kuiper belt, finding that the catastrophic disruption rate of d ~ 100 km bodies in the high-eccentricity…
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