Space technology

New instrument to track Earth's declining reflectivity

The earth reflects less sunlight than it did 20 years ago. Will we continue to lose reflectivity, and how will it affect our climate? At DTU, several researchers are participating in international missions to monitor developments.

Together with colleagues at DTU Space, PhD Katcha Koch Winther is building an instrument that can measure Earthshine, the light from Earth that illuminates the night side of the moon. Photo: Bax Lindhardt

Fact

  • The instrument juLIET (Lunar Imaging Earthshine Telescope) is designed and built by DTU Space.
  • juLIET will take photos of earthshine, which is the reflected light from the Earth that falls on the Moon.
  • The instrument will be mounted in the ROMEO satellite, which is being built by the University of Stuttgart.
  • ROMEO and juLIET are expected to be launched during 2026.
  • The project includes DTU, the Danish Meteorological Institute (DMI), and the University of Stuttgart, which is building ROMEO.
  • The project is partly funded by the European Space Agency, ESA.

Reflectivity dropping

The Earth’s albedo varies with seasons, latitudes, and times of day, but the average albedo has been calculated to be about 31 per cent. This means that just over a third of the solar radiation hitting the Earth is reflected back into space.

In 2021, American researchers found that the Earth’s albedo has declined steadily in the period 1998-2017. The total drop amounts to 0.5 per cent. When they compared data with the Sun’s cycle, they were able to rule out a correlation between the Earth’s reduced reflectivity and the Sun’s activities. In the media, they explained the Earth’s declining albedo by climate change having led to fewer low-lying clouds forming over the eastern Pacific Ocean—clouds that are particularly good at reflecting solar radiation.

However, there is uncertainty about the real cause of the declining albedo, and another possible explanation is rooted in a more positive development, which is less pollution, says Peter Thejll:

“The atmosphere’s content of sulphur particles has been falling because we burn cleaner coal and oil. The sulphur particles are aerosols that deflect part of the solar radiation, and when there are fewer of them in the atmosphere, it can contribute to the Earth’s albedo declining.”

Fact

The sunlight reflected by the Earth is called albedo. The size of the albedo varies depending on the surface the Sun’s rays hit:

  • Freshly fallen snow has an albedo of 90 per cent.
  • Old snow 50 per cent
  • Clouds (depending on type) 50-90 per cent
  • Fields 15-30 per cent.
  • Forests 3-10 per cent
  • Water surfaces 10 per cent (larger at low sun height).

Source: Den Store Danske

One measurement provides lots of data

Today, the albedo is primarily monitored using satellites that overfly the Earth and measure how much light is reflected back. It takes many overflights to cover larger areas and subsequently extensive post-processing of data to get the full picture. So it’s an advantage to measure the albedo using earthshine if you want large-scale measurements, says Katcha Koch Winther.

“Instead of doing a lot of measurements and then factoring in whether they are taken over the sea, forest, or savannah, the earthshine method enables us to basically use a single measurement. When we take a picture of the New Moon, where we see almost the entire night side of the Moon, we get a signal from almost half of the Earth in one measurement,” says Katcha Koch Winther.

Measuring the right light

But it is important to ensure that the instrument measures the right light.

Quality control has therefore played a major role in Katcha Koch Winther’s development of the instrument. Among other things, she has had a strong focus on the mirror surfaces of the camera optics, where she wants to avoid the surfaces scattering the light inside the instrument, which can also lead to faulty measurements. And it is also important to know the Moon’s own albedo.

“When we measure earthshine, we use the Moon as a kind of mirror. So we should also take into account the Moon’s own reflectivity. If it’s included incorrectly in our measurements, we risk that our calculations of the Earth’s albedo are wrong,” says Katcha Koch Winther.

The fact that earthshine is much weaker than moonshine is also a challenge in the development of a useful instrument. This is due to the large difference in brightness, which the usual camera solutions cannot take into account. Since it’s crucial to be able to separate the two light sources (earthshine and moonshine), DTU Space had to develop its own solution, and this was done by MSc Eng René Fléron.

“There are two types of information that we need to get from the instrument. We need to know exactly where on the Moon the instrument takes photos, and how much light there is. It was the realization of this duality in the task that provided the solution. The first part is solved by the camera, which takes photos and gathers data about where on the Moon photos are taken. The second part is solved by adding a photometer to the instrument. A photometer is a sensitive light meter that can handle the large differences in brightness from moonshine and earthshine, respectively,” explains René Fléron, who together with Peter Thejll at DMI was the man behind the juLIET project.

Close to the new moon, earthshine can be seen with the naked eye when the night side of the moon is dimly illuminated by Earth's light. Photo: Colourbox

DTU helping NASA

The Earth’s albedo is also of interest to NASA. In 2025, the US space agency will mount an instrument on the outside of the International Space Station (ISS) that will take measurements of both sunlight reflected from Earth and of earthshine on the Moon. DTU has supplied navigation and positioning equipment for the mission named CLARREO Pathfinder. CLARREO is short for Climate Absolute Radiance and Refractivity Observatory.

DTU’s equipment will control the CLARREO instruments so that they with high precision point to the selected areas where measurements will be made, says Professor John Leif Jørgensen.

“A more precise uncovering of the Earth’s albedo is important because it says something about how much solar radiation remains and contributes to global warming. Solar radiation is an important climate driver, and by measuring it, we can get much more accurate climate models in the future,” says John Leif Jørgensen.

For many years, the professor and his colleagues have designed, built, and delivered a steady stream of camera and navigation equipment for the NASA and ESA space missions. Many of them are climate missions whose purpose is to provide better data and measurements.

“When we build and deliver instruments for climate missions, DTU contributes to improving input to the climate models that enable politicians to decide how the world should act in relation to climate change,” says John Leif Jørgensen.

Clarreo Pathfinder is an instrument that will sit on the ISS space station and monitor the Earth's reflectivity, among other things. Visualisation: NASA