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Methods used to detect giant exoplanets can be broadly divided into two categories: indirect and direct. Indirect methods are more sensitive to planets with a small orbital period, whereas direct detection is more sensitive to planets orbiting at a large distance from their host star. %, and thus on long orbital period. This dichotomy makes it difficult to combine the two techniques on a single target at once. Simultaneous measurements made by direct and indirect techniques offer the possibility of determining the mass and luminosity of planets and a method of testing formation models. Here, we aim to show how long-baseline interferometric observations guided by radial-velocity can be used in such a way. We observed the recently-discovered giant planet $beta$ Pictoris c with GRAVITY, mounted on the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI). This study constitutes the first direct confirmation of a planet discovered through radial velocity. We find that the planet has a temperature of $T = 1250pm50$,K and a dynamical mass of $M = 8.2pm0.8,M_{rm Jup}$. At $18.5pm2.5$,Myr, this puts $beta$ Pic c close to a hot start track, which is usually associated with formation via disk instability. Conversely, the planet orbits at a distance of 2.7,au, which is too close for disk instability to occur. The low apparent magnitude ($M_{rm K} = 14.3 pm 0.1$) favours a core accretion scenario. We suggest that this apparent contradiction is a sign of hot core accretion, for example, due to the mass of the planetary core or the existence of a high-temperature accretion shock during formation.
Planet yield calculations may be used to inform the target selection strategy and science operations of space observatories. Forthcoming and proposed NASA missions, such as the Wide-Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST), the Habitable Exoplanet Im
We present results from a data challenge posed to the radial velocity (RV) community: namely, to quantify the Bayesian evidence for n={0,1,2,3} planets in a set of synthetically generated RV datasets containing a range of planet signals. Participatin
We present a comprehensive orbital analysis to the exoplanets $beta$ Pictoris b and c that resolves previously reported tensions between the dynamical and evolutionary mass constraints on $beta$ Pic b. We use the MCMC orbit code orvara to fit fifteen
High-contrast medium resolution spectroscopy has been used to detect molecules such as water and carbon monoxide in the atmospheres of gas giant exoplanets. In this work, we show how it can be used to derive radial velocity (RV) measurements of direc
Young giant exoplanets are a unique laboratory for understanding cool, low-gravity atmospheres. A quintessential example is the massive extrasolar planet $beta$ Pic b, which is 9 AU from and embedded in the debris disk of the young nearby A6V star $b