'' search volume, in the context of the
Milky Way Galaxy. Prior to Kepler observation, KOI-314 had the
2MASS catalogue number 2MASS J19213157+4317347. In the
Kepler Input Catalog it has the designation of KIC 7603200, and when it was found to have transiting planet candidates it was given the
Kepler object of interest number of KOI-314. Planetary candidates were detected around the star by
NASA's
Kepler Mission, a mission tasked with discovering planets in
transit around their stars. The transit method that Kepler uses involves detecting dips in brightness in stars. These dips in brightness can be interpreted as planets whose orbits pass in front of their stars from the perspective of
Earth, although other phenomena can also be responsible which is why the term planetary candidate is used. By timing these dips,
gravitational interactions were detected between two of the candidates, Following the acceptance of the discovery paper, the Kepler team provided an additional moniker for the system of "Kepler-138". However, the planets were discovered by scientists outside of the Kepler team who referred to the star as KOI-314, as the Kepler designation had not been assigned yet. Candidate planets that are associated with stars studied by the Kepler Mission are assigned the designations ".01", ".02", ".03", etc. after the star's name, in the order of discovery. and assigned the names KOI-314.01 and KOI-314.02, with respective orbital periods of 13.8 and 23.1 days. despite being the shortest orbital period planet (period of 10.3 days) found in the system. Confirmed planets are conventionally assigned the designations
b,
c,
d, etc. after the star's name. The labels are assigned alphabetically in the order of discovery starting from
b. Since KOI-314.01 and KOI-314.02 were confirmed as planets simultaneously, the alphabetical names were assigned in order of orbital period by the discoverers, and thus became KOI-314b and KOI-314c respectively. Since no
gravitational interactions were detected due to KOI-314.03, this planetary candidate remained unconfirmed as 6 January 2014 and thus kept the same name. In the following weeks, on 28 February 2014, a new paper validated KOI-314.03 as being a real planet with a false alarm probability of less than 1%. The new paper used different names for the planets, going from KOI-314b to Kepler-138c, KOI-314c to Kepler-138d and KOI-314.03 to Kepler-138b. These designations have been used by subsequent studies, and by databases such as the
NASA Exoplanet Archive. This situation is similar to that of some other planetary systems such as
Mu Arae, where different designations have been used for the same planets in the literature. On 16 December 2022, two possible Earth-like
water worlds
Kepler-138 c and
Kepler-138 d were detected in the Kepler 138 system by the
Hubble and
Spitzer Space Telescopes. ==Stellar characteristics==