Circular spectropolarimetric sensing of chiral photosystems in decaying leaves
C.H. Lucas Patty, Luuk J.J. Visser, Freek Ariese, Wybren Jan Buma,, William B. Sparks, Rob J.M. van Spanning, Wilfred F.M. R\"oling, Frans Snik

TL;DR
This study introduces TreePol, a new spectropolarimetric instrument capable of non-destructively measuring the chiroptical properties of leaves, revealing changes in macro-aggregates during deterioration, with potential applications in plant health and extraterrestrial life detection.
Contribution
Development of TreePol, a sensitive spectropolarimeter for in-field measurements of leaf circular polarization, enabling non-destructive assessment of plant health and macro-aggregate structure.
Findings
Circular polarization signals decrease as leaves deteriorate.
Chlorophyll levels decrease less than polarization signals.
Circular polarization can distinguish healthy from stressed leaves.
Abstract
Circular polarization spectroscopy has proven to be an indispensable tool in photosynthesis research and (bio)-molecular research in general. Oxygenic photosystems typically display an asymmetric Cotton effect around the chlorophyll absorbance maximum with a signal . In vegetation, these signals are the direct result of the chirality of the supramolecular aggregates. The circular polarization is thus directly influenced by the composition and architecture of the photosynthetic macrodomains, and is thereby linked to photosynthetic functioning. Although ordinarily measured only on a molecular level, we have developed a new spectropolarimetric instrument, TreePol, that allows for both laboratory and in-the-field measurements. Through spectral multiplexing, TreePol is capable of fast measurements with a sensitivity of and is therefore suitable of…
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