A New York high school student can put “planet discovery” on his resume after finding a new world during his NASA internship.
17-year-old Wolf Cukier interned at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, MD last July after finishing his junior year at Scarsdale High School in New York. According to NASA, his job was to examine star brightness levels captured by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, or TESS.
“I was looking through the data for everything the volunteers had flagged as an eclipsing binary, a system where two stars circle around each other and from our view eclipse each other every orbit,” Cukier said in a press release from NASA. “About three days into my internship, I saw a signal from a system called TOI 1338. At first I thought it was a stellar eclipse, but the timing was wrong. It turned out to be a planet.”
The planet, now called TOI 1338 b, is the first circumbinary planet, a world that orbits two stars, detected by TESS. The planet is 6.9 times larger than the Earth and experiences regular stellar eclipses because of its orbital pattern.
Circumbinary planets are difficult to detect because they orbit two stars instead of one, like the Earth does. When a planet crosses in front of its star, it causes a dip in that star’s brightness. The event is called a transit, which TESS’s cameras can capture. However, TESS can only see the transits of planet 1338 b when it passes by the bigger star in the system, not the smaller star.
“These are the types of signals that algorithms really struggle with,” said Veselin Kostov, a research scientist at the SETI Institute and Goddard. “The human eye is extremely good at finding patterns in data, especially non-periodic patterns like those we see in transits from these systems.”