A study on planetary atmospheric circulations using THOR
A study on planetary atmospheric circulations using THOR
The large variety of planetary parameters observed leads us to think that exoplanets may show a large range of possible climates. It is therefore of the uttermost importance to investigate the influence of astronomical and planetary bulk parameters in driving the atmospheric circulations. In the solar system the results from planetary spacecraft missions have demonstrated how different the planetary climate and atmospheric circulations can be. The study of exoplanets will require probing a far wider range of physical and orbital parameters than the ones of our neighbor planets. For this reason, such a study will involve exploring an even larger diversity of circulation and climate regimes. Our new atmospheric model, THOR, is intended to be extremely flexible and to explore the large diversity of planetary atmospheres.THOR is part of the Exoclimes Simulation Platform, and is a project of the Exoplanet and Exoclimes Group (see www.exoclime.org). THOR solves the complex atmospheric fluid equations in a rotating sphere (fully compressible - nonhydrostatic system) using an icosahedral grid. The main advantages of using our new platform against other recent exoplanet models is that 1) The atmospheric fluid equations are completely represented and no approximations are used that could compromise the physics of the problem; 2) The model uses for the first time in exoplanet studies, a specific icosahedral grid that solves the pole problem; 3) The interface is user friendly and can be easily adapted to a multitude of atmospheric conditions; 4) By using GPU computation, our code greatly improves the typical code running time.We will present and discuss the first detailed results of our simulations, more specifically of two benchmark tests that are a representative sample of the large range of exoplanetary parameters: Earth-like conditions (the Held-Suarez test) and a tidally locked hot-Jupiter. THOR has successfully passed these tests and is able to determine the main mechanisms driving the circulation in the simulated planets. From the 3D numerical simulations we found that some hot-Jupiters atmospheres can sustain multiple dynamical steady states. The results also suggest the presence of a new mechanism that transports heat from the upper to the lower atmosphere. The presence and impact of this mechanism in the global temperature will be discussed in this presentation.
...
Mendonça, João
cb29fe08-eb94-4fad-8eba-eac1c5de491b
Grosheintz, Luc
8e9565c4-ad04-49e4-ac42-4113fea6a255
Lukas Grimm, Simon
6f721a61-b052-4f15-84a1-95b17d773d9c
Heng, Kevin
11e4460d-9575-412c-b350-53e2ef459056
December 2015
Mendonça, João
cb29fe08-eb94-4fad-8eba-eac1c5de491b
Grosheintz, Luc
8e9565c4-ad04-49e4-ac42-4113fea6a255
Lukas Grimm, Simon
6f721a61-b052-4f15-84a1-95b17d773d9c
Heng, Kevin
11e4460d-9575-412c-b350-53e2ef459056
Mendonça, João, Grosheintz, Luc, Lukas Grimm, Simon and Heng, Kevin
(2015)
A study on planetary atmospheric circulations using THOR.
American Astronomical Society, ESS meeting #3.
01 Jan 2015.
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Other)
Abstract
The large variety of planetary parameters observed leads us to think that exoplanets may show a large range of possible climates. It is therefore of the uttermost importance to investigate the influence of astronomical and planetary bulk parameters in driving the atmospheric circulations. In the solar system the results from planetary spacecraft missions have demonstrated how different the planetary climate and atmospheric circulations can be. The study of exoplanets will require probing a far wider range of physical and orbital parameters than the ones of our neighbor planets. For this reason, such a study will involve exploring an even larger diversity of circulation and climate regimes. Our new atmospheric model, THOR, is intended to be extremely flexible and to explore the large diversity of planetary atmospheres.THOR is part of the Exoclimes Simulation Platform, and is a project of the Exoplanet and Exoclimes Group (see www.exoclime.org). THOR solves the complex atmospheric fluid equations in a rotating sphere (fully compressible - nonhydrostatic system) using an icosahedral grid. The main advantages of using our new platform against other recent exoplanet models is that 1) The atmospheric fluid equations are completely represented and no approximations are used that could compromise the physics of the problem; 2) The model uses for the first time in exoplanet studies, a specific icosahedral grid that solves the pole problem; 3) The interface is user friendly and can be easily adapted to a multitude of atmospheric conditions; 4) By using GPU computation, our code greatly improves the typical code running time.We will present and discuss the first detailed results of our simulations, more specifically of two benchmark tests that are a representative sample of the large range of exoplanetary parameters: Earth-like conditions (the Held-Suarez test) and a tidally locked hot-Jupiter. THOR has successfully passed these tests and is able to determine the main mechanisms driving the circulation in the simulated planets. From the 3D numerical simulations we found that some hot-Jupiters atmospheres can sustain multiple dynamical steady states. The results also suggest the presence of a new mechanism that transports heat from the upper to the lower atmosphere. The presence and impact of this mechanism in the global temperature will be discussed in this presentation.
...
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Published date: December 2015
Venue - Dates:
American Astronomical Society, ESS meeting #3, 2015-01-01 - 2015-01-01
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 496946
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496946
PURE UUID: a19fd1ae-4ded-40d6-a8ed-668014ddc397
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Date deposited: 08 Jan 2025 15:09
Last modified: 10 Jan 2025 03:21
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Contributors
Author:
João Mendonça
Author:
Luc Grosheintz
Author:
Simon Lukas Grimm
Author:
Kevin Heng
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