Spectropolarimetry of life

Airborne measurements from a hot air balloon

Conference Paper (2022)
Authors

Willeke Mulder (Universiteit Leiden, Astrodynamics & Space Missions)

C. H.Lucas Patty (University of Bern)

Stefano Spadaccia (University of Bern)

Antoine Pommerol (University of Bern)

Brice Olivier Demory (University of Bern)

U. Keller (Universiteit Leiden, Lowell Observatory)

Jonas G. Kühn (Université de Genève, University of Bern)

F. Snik (Universiteit Leiden)

D. M. Stam (Astrodynamics & Space Missions)

Affiliation
Astrodynamics & Space Missions
Copyright
© 2022 W. Mulder, C. H.Lucas Patty, Stefano Spadaccia, Antoine Pommerol, Brice Olivier Demory, Christoph U. Keller, Jonas G. Kühn, Frans Snik, D.M. Stam
To reference this document use:
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2633271
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 W. Mulder, C. H.Lucas Patty, Stefano Spadaccia, Antoine Pommerol, Brice Olivier Demory, Christoph U. Keller, Jonas G. Kühn, Frans Snik, D.M. Stam
Affiliation
Astrodynamics & Space Missions
ISBN (electronic)
9781510654129
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2633271
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Abstract

Does life exist outside our Solar System A first step towards searching for life outside our Solar System is detecting life on Earth by using remote sensing applications. One powerful and unambiguous biosignature is the circular polarization resulting from the homochirality of biotic molecules and systems. We aim to investigate the possibility of identifying and characterizing life on Earth by using airborne spectropolarimetric observations from a hot air balloon during our field campaign in Switzerland, May 2022. In this proceeding we present the optical-setup and the data obtained from aerial circular spectropolarimetric measurements of farmland, forests, lakes and urban sites. We make use of the well-calibrated FlyPol instrument that measures the fractionally induced circular polarization (V/I) of (reflected) light with a sensitivity of < 10-4. The instrument operates in the visible spectrum, ranging from 400 to 900 nm. We demonstrate the possibility to distinguish biotic from abiotic features using circular polarization spectra and additional broadband linear polarization information. We review the performance of our optical-setup and discuss potential improvements. This sets the requirements on how to perform future airborne spectropolarimetric measurements of the Earth's surface features from several elevations.

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