Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 September 2017
Terrestrial biochemistry is based upon chiral (handed) molecules, of which only one of the two possible hands is predominantly employed. This biomolecular “homochirality”, may be a universal “signature” of life. Along with all living organisms, plant leaves are constructed from arrays of chiral molecules of a single hand. Through the development of a new spectroscopic approach, Diffuse Reflectance Circular Dichroism in the UV-visible wavelength regions, we have detected this chirality non-invasively from non-specular light scattered by leaves. The characteristic spectra are sensitive to plant species and leaf age/health. The technique may provide a means of remote sensing the state of flora and, at closer range, an indicator of living organisms for interplanetary landers.