Spectropolarimetry of primitive phototrophs as global surface biosignatures
William B. Sparks, M. Niki Parenteau, Robert E. Blankenship, Thomas A., Germer, C.H. Lucas Patty, Kimberly M. Bott, Charles M. Telesco, Victoria S., Meadows

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that surface polarization biosignatures, especially circular polarization signals from photosynthetic microbes, could serve as detectable indicators of life on exoplanets, based on diverse microbial samples and environmental conditions.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive characterization of polarization biosignatures from primitive and oxygenic phototrophs, highlighting their potential for remote life detection.
Findings
Circular polarization signals up to ~1% observed
Diverse polarization signatures linked to different pigments
Pigment release enhances polarization signals significantly
Abstract
Photosynthesis is an ancient metabolic process that began on the early Earth, offering plentiful energy to organisms that utilize it, to the extent that they can achieve global significance. The potential exists for similar processes to operate on habitable exoplanets and result in observable biosignatures. Prior to the advent of oxygenic photosynthesis, the most primitive phototrophs, anoxygenic phototrophs, dominated surface environments on the planet. Here, we characterize surface polarization biosignatures associated with a diverse sample of anoxygenic phototrophs and cyanobacteria, examining both pure cultures and microbial communities from the natural environment. Polarimetry is a tool that can be used to measure the chiral signature of biomolecules. Chirality is considered a universal, agnostic biosignature that is independent of a planet's biochemistry, receiving considerable…
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