Bibcode
DOI
Pallé, E.; Ford, Eric B.; Seager, S.; Montañés-Rodríguez, P.; Vazquez, M.
Referencia bibliográfica
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 676, Issue 2, pp. 1319-1329.
Fecha de publicación:
4
2008
Revista
Número de citas
81
Número de citas referidas
68
Descripción
With the recent discoveries of hundreds of extrasolar planets, the
search for planets like Earth and life in the universe is quickly
gaining momentum. In the future, large space observatories could
directly detect the light scattered from rocky planets, but they would
not be able to spatially resolve a planet's surface. Using reflectance
models and real cloud data from satellite observations, here we show
that, despite Earth's dynamic weather patterns, the light scattered by
the Earth to a hypothetical distant observer as a function of time
contains sufficient information to accurately measure Earth's rotation
period. This is because ocean currents and continents result in
relatively stable averaged global cloud patterns. The accuracy of these
measurements will vary with the viewing geometry and other observational
constraints. If the rotation period can be measured with accuracy, data
spanning several months could be coherently combined to obtain
spectroscopic information about individual regions of the planetary
surface. Moreover, deviations from a periodic signal can be used to
infer the presence of relatively short-lived structures in its
atmosphere (i.e., clouds). This could provide a useful technique for
recognizing exoplanets that have active weather systems, changing on a
timescale comparable to their rotation. Such variability is likely to be
related to the atmospheric temperature and pressure being near a phase
transition and could support the possibility of liquid water on the
planet's surface.