High resolution transmission spectrum of the Earth's atmosphere -- Seeing Earth as an exoplanet using a lunar eclipse
Fei Yan, Robert A.E. Fosbury, Monika G. Petr-Gotzens, Gang Zhao, Wei, Wang, Liang Wang, Yujuan Liu, and Enric Pall\'e

TL;DR
This study captures a high-resolution transmission spectrum of Earth's atmosphere during a lunar eclipse, providing a detailed template for exoplanet atmosphere characterization, especially highlighting ozone detection as promising for future exo-Earth studies.
Contribution
First high-resolution, high SNR transmission spectrum of Earth's atmosphere via lunar eclipse, enabling detailed atmospheric species analysis relevant for exoplanet research.
Findings
Detected O2, O3, O2-O2, NO2, and H2O in Earth's atmosphere
Ozone's Chappuis band is a prominent absorption feature
Resolved individual O2 lines and isotopes
Abstract
With the rapid developments in the exoplanet field, more and more terrestrial exoplanets are being detected. Characterising their atmospheres using transit observations will become a key datum in the quest for detecting an Earth-like exoplanet. The atmospheric transmission spectrum of our Earth will be an ideal template for comparison with future exo-Earth candidates. By observing a lunar eclipse, which offers a similar configuration to that of an exoplanet transit, we have obtained a high resolution and high signal-to-noise ratio transmission spectrum of the Earth's atmosphere. This observation was performed with the High Resolution Spectrograph at Xinglong Station, China during the total lunar eclipse in December 2011. We compare the observed transmission spectrum with our atmospheric model, and determine the characteristics of the various atmospheric species in detail. In the…
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