"I gave him a brief outline of what we do, and he learned everything by himself," Kostov said. "He learned really quickly. He really developed a very good understanding of the field."
The summer was the first time Cukier worked with NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, known as TESS, he said.
TESS monitors the brightness of stars for periodic drops caused by planetary transits, according to NASA.
The teen had a framework of what to look for based on his exploring the Planet Hunters TESS citizen science project, which allows people to comb through TESS data and categorise different star systems, he said.
While looking at an image at his internship, he thought something looked "suspicious," he said, noting that the image had an additional feature that made him alert Kostov.
"After we saw the original transit, we looked at the full light curve and saw three transits," Cukier said.
Cukier and Kostov spent hours verifying that the additional features they were seeing were real by looking through multiple data sets.
"It was just Wolf and me in the first couple of hours, and when we were 99 per cent certain the two traits we saw were real, we started reaching out to colleagues," Kostov said.
"It definitely coloured the rest of the internship," Cukier said of his planet discovery. "Now, not only was I working on searching for additional planets, I was learning the full verification that goes into verifying a planet when we suspect it to be one. "
That process included using different data tools and involving researchers from the University of Chicago, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and San Diego State.
The process was actually much faster than normal, taking about two to three months to confirm Cukier's discovery as a planet, Kostov said.
The finding is a positive sign for the TESS' capabilities, Kostov said, adding that he believes there will be more planets to be found.
"TESS is the only instrument that would allow us to discover this type of planet," Kostov said.
Cukier co-wrote a paper about his internship find with scientists from Goddard and other institutions that has been submitted for scientific review.
TOI 1338 b was also featured in a panel discussion Monday at the 235th American Astronomical Society meeting in Honolulu, according to NASA.
Cukier couldn't name the planet, but his brother offered a better sobriquet: Wolftopia.
Now a high school senior, Cukier has his sights set on colleges such as Princeton University, Stanford University and MIT, where he can major in either astrophysics or physics.
He's still figuring out his summer plans, he said.