Detection of Ocean Glint and Ozone Absorption Using LCROSS Earth Observations
Tyler D. Robinson, Kimberly Ennico, Victoria S. Meadows, William, Sparks, D. Ben J. Bussey, Edward W. Schwieterman, and Jonathan Breiner

TL;DR
This study analyzes Earth observations from LCROSS, validating spectral models, detecting ocean glint and ozone absorption, and exploring implications for exoplanet habitability detection.
Contribution
First comparison of high-resolution Earth spectra with a 3D spectral model, confirming the model's accuracy and demonstrating ocean glint detection relevant for exoplanet studies.
Findings
Validated spectral Earth model with observations within 10% accuracy
Detected ocean glint signature consistent with model predictions
Identified ozone absorption features and discussed false positives
Abstract
The Lunar CRater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) observed the distant Earth on three occasions in 2009. These data span a range of phase angles, including a rare crescent phase view. For each epoch, the satellite acquired near-infrared and mid-infrared full-disk images, and partial-disk spectra at 0.26-0.65 microns (R~500) and 1.17-2.48 microns (R~50). Spectra show strong absorption features due to water vapor and ozone, which is a biosignature gas. We perform a significant recalibration of the UV-visible spectra and provide the first comparison of high-resolution visible Earth spectra to the NASA Astrobiology Institute's Virtual Planetary Laboratory three-dimensional spectral Earth model. We find good agreement with the observations, reproducing the absolute brightness and dynamic range at all wavelengths for all observation epochs, thus validating the model to within the…
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