The detections of small, rocky exoplanets have surged in recent years and
will likely continue to do so. To know whether a rocky exoplanet is habitable,
we have to characterise its atmosphere and surface. A promising
characterisation method for rocky exoplanets is direct detection using
spectropolarimetry. This method will be based on single pixel signals, because
spatially resolving exoplanets is impossible with current and near-future
instruments. Well-tested retrieval algorithms are essential to interpret these
single pixel signals in terms of atmospheric composition, cloud and surface
coverage. Observations of Earth itself provide the obvious benchmark data for
testing such algorithms. The observations should provide signals that are
integrated over the Earth's disk, that capture day and night variations, and
all phase angles. The Moon is a unique platform from where the Earth can be
observed as an exoplanet, undisturbed, all of the time. Here, we present LOUPE,
the Lunar Observatory for Unresolved Polarimetry of Earth, a small and robust
spectropolarimeter to observe our Earth as an exoplanet.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, submitted in special Issue of Planetary and
Space Science on Scientific Preparations for Lunar Exploratio