Bibcode
DOI
Montañés-Rodríguez, Pilar; Pallé, E.; Goode, P. R.; Martín-Torres, F. J.
Referencia bibliográfica
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 651, Issue 1, pp. 544-552.
Fecha de publicación:
11
2006
Revista
Número de citas
75
Número de citas referidas
67
Descripción
A series of missions will be launched over the next few decades that
will be designed to detect and characterize extrasolar planets around
nearby stars. These missions will search for habitable environments and
signs of life (biosignatures) in planetary spectra. The vegetation's
``red edge,'' an enhancement in the Earth's spectrum near 700 nm when
sunlight is reflected from greenery, is often suggested as a tool in the
search for life in terrestrial-like extrasolar planets. Here, through
ground-based observations of the Earth's spectrum, satellite
observations of clouds, and an advanced atmospheric radiative-transfer
code, we determine the temporal evolution of the vegetation signature of
Earth. We find a strong correlation between the evolution of the
spectral intensity of the red edge and changes in the cloud-free
vegetated area over the course of observations. This relative increase
for our single day corresponds to an apparent reflectance change of
about 0.0050+/-0.0005 with respect to the mean albedo of 0.25 at 680 nm
(2.0%+/-0.2%). The excellent agreement between models and observations
motivated us to probe more deeply into the red-edge detectability using
real cloud observations at longer timescales. Overall, we find the
evolution of the red-edge signal in the globally averaged spectra to be
weak, and only attributable to vegetation changes when the real land and
cloud distributions for the day are known. However, it becomes prominent
under certain Sun-Earth-Moon orbital geometries that are applicable to
the search for life in extrasolar planets. Our results indicate that
vegetation detection in Earth-like planets will require a considerable
level of instrumental precision and will be a difficult task, but not as
difficult as the normally weak earthshine signal might seem to suggest.