Over the past 13 years, present-day astronomers have found more than 300 planets orbiting other stars. But none of those worlds has been viewed directly. To detect most of those extrasolar planets, astronomers have measured slight wobbles in the parent stars caused by the tugs of unseen companions, but the astronomers cannot see the alien worlds that are too dim and far away, about one-millionth the brightness of their stars, to be seen.
Like the hundreds of other known extrasolar planets, Fomalhaut b is a gas-giant world, estimated to be no more than three times Jupiter’s mass. But astronomers suspect it might have one characteristic that separates the newly discovered planet from its extrasolar brethren that being an immense Saturn-like ring system. Perhaps the ring will eventually coalesce to form moons. The ring’s estimated size is comparable to the region around Jupiter that is filled with the orbits of the four largest satellites in our solar system.
"Fomalhaut b may actually show us what Jupiter and Saturn resembled when the solar system was about 100 million years old," Kalas says. Astronomers have long considered the Fomalhaut system as a potential breeding ground for planets because of the star’s vast debris ring.
Kalas and team members proposed in 2005 that the disk was being gravitationally modified by a planet lying between the star and the ring’s inner edge. This disk is similar to the Kuiper Belt of comets that encircles our outer solar system. The Kuiper Belt is our solar system’s attic, containing a range of icy bodies from dust grains to objects the size of dwarf planets, such as Pluto. Circumstantial evidence for their planet theory came from Hubble’s confirmation that the Fomalhaut ring is offset from the star’s center. The disk’s sharp inner edge is also consistent with the presence of a planet that gravitationally "shepherds" particles within it.
Observations taken 21 months apart with Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys show that the object is moving in an orbit around Fomalhaut, and therefore, is gravitationally bound to it. The exotic world is 10.7 billion miles from its host, or about 10 times the distance between Saturn and our sun. The planet is unlikely to harbor life because it is too young and too hot. Fomalhaut is a relatively young star, only 200 million years old.
Kalas and his team plan follow-up Hubble observations in 2009 to further study the Fomalhaut system when future observations may turn up more planets. Fomalhaut b may be the outermost planet in a whole solar system of planets, just as Neptune is in our solar system. Astronomers, however, may have to wait for the James Webb Space Telescope, slated to launch in 2013, to find out whether planets in the Fomalhaut system could sustain life.

