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The bright $(V=3.86)$ star $beta$ Pictoris is a nearby young star with a debris disk and gas giant exoplanet, $beta$ Pictoris b, in a multi-decade orbit around it. Both the planets orbit and disk are almost edge-on to our line of sight. We carry out a search for any transiting planets in the $beta$ Pictoris system with orbits of less than 30 days that are coplanar with the planet $beta$ Pictoris b. We search for a planetary transit using data from the BRITE-Constellation nanosatellite BRITE-Heweliusz, analyzing the photometry using the Box-Fitting Least Squares Algorithm (BLS). The sensitivity of the method is verified by injection of artificial planetary transit signals using the Bad-Ass Transit Model cAlculatioN (BATMAN) code. No planet was found in the BRITE-Constellation data set. We rule out planets larger than 0.6 $mathrm{R_J}$ for periods of less than 5 days, larger than 0.75 $mathrm{R_J}$ for periods of less than 10 days, and larger than 1.05 $mathrm{R_J}$ for periods of less than 20 days.
Photometry of stars from the K2 extension of NASAs Kepler mission is afflicted by systematic effects caused by small (few-pixel) drifts in the telescope pointing and other spacecraft issues. We present a method for searching K2 light curves for evide
Exoplanetary science has reached a historic moment. The James Webb Space Telescope will be capable of probing the atmospheres of rocky planets, and perhaps even search for biologically produced gases. However this is contingent on identifying suitabl
We search for signs of falling evaporating bodies (FEBs, also known as exocomets) in photometric time series obtained for $beta$ Pictoris after fitting and removing its $delta$ Scuti type pulsation frequencies. Using photometric data obtained by the
The Beta Pictoris Moving Group is a nearby stellar association of young (12Myr) co-moving stars including the classical debris disk star beta Pictoris. Due to their proximity and youth they are excellent targets when searching for submillimetre emiss
Because the planets of a system form in a flattened disk, they are expected to share similar orbital inclinations at the end of their formation. The high-precision photometric monitoring of stars known to host a transiting planet could thus reveal th