Scientists use moon as a mirror to study Earth during lunar eclipse

Scientists use moon as a mirror to study Earth during lunar eclipse, Astronomers used the moon as a mirror to study Earth during a lunar eclipse, simulating how scientists might search for signs of extraterrestrial life.
In a recent study, scientists using the NASA/European Space Agency Hubble Space Telescope detected ozone in Earth's atmosphere during a lunar eclipse on Jan. 20-21, 2019. But they did so indirectly, capturing light that bounced off the moon after passing through Earth's atmosphere. 
"Finding ozone is significant because it is a photochemical byproduct of molecular oxygen, which is itself a byproduct of life," Allison Youngblood of the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics in Boulder, Colorado, lead researcher of Hubble's observations, said in a NASA statement. 
The study could, therefore, serve as a proving ground, helping researchers shape their search for signs of life around exoplanets, team members said.
"One of NASA's major goals is to identify planets that could support life," Youngblood said. "But how would we know a habitable or an uninhabited planet if we saw one? What would they look like with the techniques that astronomers have at their disposal for characterizing the atmospheres of exoplanets? That's why it's important to develop models of Earth's spectrum as a template for categorizing atmospheres on extrasolar planets."
Ozone also helps protect life on Earth, by absorbing damaging ultraviolet radiation. The recent observations mark the first time that a lunar eclipse was captured at ultraviolet wavelengths from a space telescope, the researchers said.
This work was published Aug. 6 in The Astronomical Journal.
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