Colors of an Earth-like exoplanet -- Temporal flux and polarization signals of the Earth
A. Groot, L. Rossi, V.J.H. Trees, J.C.Y. Cheung, D.M. Stam

TL;DR
This paper models the flux and polarization signals of Earth-like exoplanets using real Earth data to aid future observational strategies and instrument design, revealing how clouds and surface features influence detectable signals.
Contribution
It provides detailed simulations of flux and polarization signals of Earth-like planets incorporating realistic cloud and surface data, enhancing understanding of observational signatures.
Findings
Total flux is an order of magnitude higher than polarized flux.
Clouds modify but do not eliminate surface rotation signals.
Color changes in polarization signals indicate surface and cloud properties.
Abstract
Understanding the total flux and polarization signals of Earth-like planets and their spectral and temporal variability is essential for the future characterization of such exoplanets. We provide computed total (F) and linearly (Q and U) and circularly (V) polarized fluxes, and the degree of polarization P of sunlight that is reflected by a model Earth, to be used for instrument designs, optimizing observational strategies, and/or developing retrieval algorithms. We modeled a realistic Earth-like planet using one year of daily Earth-observation data: cloud parameters (distribution, optical thickness, top pressure, and particle effective radius), and surface parameters (distribution, surface type, and albedo). The Stokes vector of the disk-averaged reflected sunlight was computed for phase angles alpha from 0 to 180 degrees, and for wavelengths lambda from 350 to 865 nm. The total flux F…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications
