A point of light once flagged as a full exoplanet has now slipped below detection limits, while its neighbor Fomalhaut b continues to carve an off-kilter track through space. The contrast is sharpening a puzzle at the edge of a bright debris ring around the star Fomalhaut.
Follow-up imaging shows the vanished object fading instead of holding a steady luminosity, behavior more consistent with a dispersing dust cloud than with a solid planet reflecting starlight. Fomalhaut b, long treated as a benchmark world, also resists simple classification: its orbit appears eccentric and misaligned with the system’s debris belt, and its brightness profile changes with wavelength in ways that hint at an extended, dusty envelope rather than a compact atmosphere.
Those clues push some researchers to favor models in which both signals arise from recent collisions between icy planetesimals, feeding short-lived clouds that mimic planets for only a fraction of an orbital period. The underlying physics involves radiative transfer through micron-scale grains and N-body gravitational dynamics that can stretch or shear such clouds into distorted arcs. If that interpretation holds, the Fomalhaut system becomes less a tidy planetary architecture and more a high-energy laboratory for watching planet formation and destruction in real time.