Directional aspects of vegetation linear and circular polarization biosignatures

Homochirality is a generic and unique property of all biochemical life and is considered a universal and agnostic biosignature. Upon interaction with unpolarized light, homochirality induces fractional circular polarization in the light that is scattered from it, which can be sensed remotely. As suc...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2022-07
Hauptverfasser: Lucas Patty, C H, Pommerol, Antoine, Kühn, Jonas G, Brice-Olivier Demory, Thomas, Nicolas
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Pommerol, Antoine
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Brice-Olivier Demory
Thomas, Nicolas
description Homochirality is a generic and unique property of all biochemical life and is considered a universal and agnostic biosignature. Upon interaction with unpolarized light, homochirality induces fractional circular polarization in the light that is scattered from it, which can be sensed remotely. As such, it can be a prime candidate biosignature in the context of future life-detection missions and observatories. The linear polarizance of vegetation is also sometimes envisaged as a biosignature, although it does not share the molecular origin as circular polarization. It is known that the linear polarization of surfaces is strongly dependent on the phase angle. The relation between the phase angle and circular polarization stemming from macromolecular assemblies, such as in vegetation, however, remained unclear. We demonstrate in this study using the average of 27 different species that the circular polarization phase angle dependency of vegetation induces relatively small changes in spectral shape and mostly affects the signal magnitude. With these results we underline the use of circular spectropolarimetry as a promising agnostic biosignature complementary to the use of linear spectropolarimetry and scalar reflectance.
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subjects Circular polarization
Linear polarization
Observatories
Phase shift
Physics - Biological Physics
Physics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
Quantitative Biology - Biomolecules
Remote sensing
Vegetation
title Directional aspects of vegetation linear and circular polarization biosignatures
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