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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 years of radial velocities and relative astrometry (including recent GRAVITY measurements), absolute astrometry from Hipparcos and Gaia, and a single relative radial velocity measurement between $beta$ Pic A and b. We measure model-independent masses of $9.3^{+2.6}_{-2.5}, M_{rm Jup}$ for $beta$ Pic b and $8.3pm 1.0,M_{rm Jup}$ for $beta$ Pic c. These masses are robust to modest changes to the input data selection. We find a well-constrained eccentricity of $0.119 pm 0.008$ for $beta$ Pic b, and an eccentricity of $0.21^{+0.16}_{-0.09}$ for $beta$ Pic c, with the two orbital planes aligned to within $sim$0.5$^circ$. Both planets masses are within $sim$1$sigma$ of the predictions of hot-start evolutionary models and exclude cold starts. We validate our approach on $N$-body synthetic data integrated using REBOUND. We show that orvara can account for three-body effects in the $beta$ Pic system down to a level $sim$5 times smaller than the GRAVITY uncertainties. Systematics in the masses and orbital parameters from orvaras approximate treatment of multiplanet orbits are a factor of $sim$5 smaller than the uncertainties we derive here. Future GRAVITY observations will improve the constraints on $beta$ Pic cs mass and (especially) eccentricity, but improved constraints on the mass of $beta$ Pic b will likely require years of additional RV monitoring and improved precision from future Gaia data releases.
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 l
The intermediate-mass star Beta Pictoris is known to be surrounded by a structured edge-on debris disk within which a gas giant planet was discovered orbiting at 8-10 AU. The physical properties of Beta Pic b were previously inferred from broad and n
We present $H$-band observations of $beta$ Pic with the Gemini Planet Imagers (GPIs) polarimetry mode that reveal the debris disk between ~0.3 (~6 AU) and ~1.7 (~33 AU), while simultaneously detecting $beta$ Pic $b$. The polarized disk image was fit
We aim at resolving the circumstellar environment around beta Pic in the near-infrared in order to study the inner planetary system (< 200 mas, i.e., ~4 AU). Precise interferometric fringe visibility measurements were obtained over seven spectral cha
Aims: We carried out high-resolution spectroscopy and BV(I)_C photometric monitoring of the two fastest late-type rotators in the nearby Beta Pictoris moving group, HD199143 (F7V) and CD-641208 (K7V). The motivation for this work is to investigate th