Abstract

When Earth-mass extrasolar planets first become detectable, one challenge will be to determine which of these worlds harbor liquid water, a widely used criterion for habitability. Some of the first observations of these planets will consist of disc-averaged, time-resolved broadband photometry. To simulate such data, the Deep Impact spacecraft obtained light curves of Earth at seven wavebands spanning 300-1000 nm as part of the EPOXI mission of opportunity. In this paper, we analyze disc-integrated light curves, treating Earth as if it were an exoplanet, to determine if we can detect the presence of oceans and continents. We present two observations each spanning 1 day, taken at gibbous phases of 57° and 77°, respectively. As expected, the time-averaged spectrum of Earth is blue at short wavelengths due to Rayleigh scattering, and gray redward of 600 nm due to reflective clouds. The rotation of the planet leads to diurnal albedo variations of 15%-30%, with the largest relative changes occurring at the reddest wavelengths. To characterize these variations in an unbiased manner, we carry out a principal component analysis of the multi-band light curves; this analysis reveals that 98% of the diurnal color changes of Earth are due to only two dominant eigencolors. We use the time variations of these two eigencolors to construct longitudinal maps of the Earth, treating it as a non-uniform Lambert sphere. We find that the spectral and spatial distributions of the eigencolors correspond to cloud-free continents and oceans despite the fact that our observations were taken on days with typical cloud cover. We also find that the near-infrared wavebands are particularly useful in distinguishing between land and water. Based on this experiment, we conclude that it should be possible to infer the existence of water oceans on exoplanets with time-resolved broadband observations taken by a large space-based coronagraphic telescope.

Highlights

  • The rate of discovery of extrasolar planets is increasing and every year it is possible to detect smaller planets

  • For other planets—including solar system analogs—spatially separating the image of the planet from that of the host star will have to wait for space-based telescopes like Terrestrial Planet Finder (TPF)/ Darwin (Traub et al 2006; Beichman et al 2006; Fridlund 2002)

  • As noted over a century ago by Russell (1906), variations in the reflected light of an unresolved rotating object can be used to learn about albedo markings on the body. Such light-curve inversions have proved valuable to interpret the photometry of objects viewed near full phase and led, for example, to the first albedo map of Pluto (Lacis & Fix 1972)

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

The rate of discovery of extrasolar planets is increasing and every year it is possible to detect smaller planets. As noted over a century ago by Russell (1906), variations in the reflected light of an unresolved rotating object can be used to learn about albedo markings on the body Such light-curve inversions have proved valuable to interpret the photometry of objects viewed near full phase and led, for example, to the first albedo map of Pluto (Lacis & Fix 1972).

OBSERVATIONS
Cloud Variability
DETERMINING PRINCIPAL COLORS
MAPPING SURFACE TYPES
Reflected Light From a Non-Uniform Lambert Sphere
Sinusoidal and N-Slice Maps
Obliquity
Findings
DISCUSSION
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call