论文标题
通过将地球作为系外行星测试来区分系外行星上的多细胞寿命
Distinguishing multicellular life on exoplanets by testing Earth as an exoplanet
论文作者
论文摘要
可以将多细胞寿命与系外行星上的单细胞寿命区分开吗?我们假设丰富的直立的光合作用多细胞生命(树)将以高太阳角度施放阴影,将它们与单个蜂窝寿命区分开,并使用地球作为系外行星进行测试。我们首先在弗拉格斯塔夫(Flagstaff),亚利桑那州(Arizona)附近的复制品月亮着陆点上使用无人理车辆(UAVS)测试该概念,并且展示树木既具有独特的反射率签名(红色边缘)和几何签名(红色角度的阴影),可以将它们与复制月球弹奏者区分开。接下来,我们以多个相角的反射率特征(地球反射率的极化和方向性)卫星方向反射率测量,然后将地球减少到单个像素。我们将地球与其他行星体(火星,月球,金星和天王星)进行比较,并假设地球方向反射将在强烈反向散射的岩石体之间,没有耐候性(例如火星和月球)和多云的身体,具有更多的等同于同位素散射(如Venus和Uranus)。我们的建模结果使地球与强烈反向散射的火星保持一致,而我们的经验结果使地球与更多的各向同性散射金星保持一致。我们确定了模型和经验结果的潜在弱点,并提出了其他步骤来确定该技术是否可以区分系外行星上的多细胞生命。
Can multicellular life be distinguished from single cellular life on an exoplanet? We hypothesize that abundant upright photosynthetic multicellular life (trees) will cast shadows at high sun angles that will distinguish them from single cellular life and test this using Earth as an exoplanet. We first test the concept using Unmanned Arial Vehicles (UAVs) at a replica moon landing site near Flagstaff, Arizona and show trees have both a distinctive reflectance signature (red edge) and geometric signature (shadows at high sun angles) that can distinguish them from replica moon craters. Next, we calculate reflectance signatures for Earth at several phase angles with POLDER (Polarization and Directionality of Earth's reflectance) satellite directional reflectance measurements and then reduce Earth to a single pixel. We compare Earth to other planetary bodies (Mars, the Moon, Venus, and Uranus) and hypothesize that Earths directional reflectance will be between strongly backscattering rocky bodies with no weathering (like Mars and the Moon) and cloudy bodies with more isotropic scattering (like Venus and Uranus). Our modelling results put Earth in line with strongly backscattering Mars, while our empirical results put Earth in line with more isotropic scattering Venus. We identify potential weaknesses in both the modeled and empirical results and suggest additional steps to determine whether this technique could distinguish upright multicellular life on exoplanets.