Bibcode
Palle, E.; Sanroma, E.; Parenteau, M. N.; Kiang, N. Y.; Gutierrez-Navarro, A. M.; Lopez, R.; Montañes-Rodríguez, P.
Referencia bibliográfica
Search for Life Beyond the Solar System. Exoplanets, Biosignatures & Instruments. Online at http://www.ebi2014.org, id.2.15
Fecha de publicación:
3
2014
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
Ongoing searches for exoplanetary systems have revealed a wealth of
planets with diverse physical properties. Planets even smaller than the
Earth have already been detected and the efforts of future missions are
aimed at the discovery, and perhaps characterization, of small rocky
exoplanets within the habitable zone of their stars.
Clearly, what we know about our planet will be our guideline for the
characterization of such planets. But the Earth has been inhabited for
at least 3.8 Gyr and its appearance has changed with time. Here, we have
studied the Earth during the Archean eon, 3 Gyr ago. At that time, one
of the more widespread life forms on the planet were purple bacteria.
These bacteria are photosynthetic microorganisms and can inhabit both
aquatic and terrestrial environments. Here, we use a radiative transfer
model to simulate the visible and near-infrared radiation reflected by
our planet, taking into account several scenarios regarding the possible
distribution of purple bacteria over continents and oceans. We find that
purple bacteria have a reflectance spectrum that has a strong
reflectivity increase, similar to the red edge of leafy plants, although
shifted redward. This feature produces a detectable signal in the
disk-averaged spectra of our planet, depending on cloud amount and
bacteria concentration/ distribution.
We conclude that by using multi-color photometric observations, it is
possible to distinguish between an Archean Earth in which purple
bacteria inhabit vast extensions of the planet and a present-day Earth
with continents covered by deserts, vegetation, or microbial mats.