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Atmospheric convection plays a key role in the climate of tidally-locked terrestrial exoplanets: insights from high-resolution simulations

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posted on 2025-08-01, 09:11 authored by D Sergeev, F Lambert, N Mayne, I Boutle, J Manners, K Kohary
Using a 3D general circulation model (GCM), we investigate the sensitivity of the climate of tidallylocked Earth-like exoplanets, Trappist-1e and Proxima Centauri b, to the choice of a convection parameterization. Compared to a mass-flux convection parameterization, a simplified convection adjustment parameterization leads to a >60 % decrease of the cloud albedo, increasing the mean day-side temperature by ≈10 K. The representation of convection also affects the atmospheric conditions of the night side, via a change in planetary-scale wave patterns. As a result, using the convection adjustment scheme makes the night-side cold traps warmer by 17–36 K for the planets in our simulations. The day-night thermal contrast is sensitive to the representation of convection in 3D GCM simulations, so caution should be taken when interpreting emission phase curves. The choice of convection treatment, however, does not alter the simulated climate enough to result in a departure from habitable conditions, at least for the atmospheric composition and planetary parameters used in our study. The near-surface conditions both in the Trappist-1e and Proxima b cases remain temperate, allowing for an active water cycle. We further advance our analysis using high-resolution model experiments, in which atmospheric convection is simulated explicitly. Our results suggest that in a hypothetical global convection-permitting simulation the surface temperature contrast would be higher than in the coarse-resolution simulations with parameterized convection. In other words, models with parameterized convection may overestimate the inter-hemispheric heat redistribution efficiency.

Funding

Leverhulme Trust

ST/R000395/1

Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC)

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© 2020. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Notes

This is the final version. Available from IOP Piblishing via the DOI in this record

Journal

Astrophysical Journal

Publisher

American Astronomical Society / IOP Publishing

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2020-04-09T10:14:22Z

FOA date

2020-07-31T14:34:36Z

Citation

Vol. 894 (2), article 84

Department

  • Physics and Astronomy

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