The impact of mixing treatments on cloud modelling in 3D simulations of hot Jupiters
Christie, DA; Mayne, NJ; Lines, S; et al.Parmentier, V; Manners, J; Boutle, I; Drummond, B; Mikal-Evans, T; Sing, DK; Kohari, K
Date: 16 July 2021
Journal
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Publisher
Oxford University Press / Royal Astronomical Society
Publisher DOI
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Abstract
We present results of 3D hydrodynamical simulations of HD209458b including a coupled,
radiatively-active cloud model (EddySed). We investigate the role of the mixing by replacing
the default convective treatment used in previous works with a more physically relevant
mixing treatment (𝐾𝑧𝑧 ) based on global circulation. We find ...
We present results of 3D hydrodynamical simulations of HD209458b including a coupled,
radiatively-active cloud model (EddySed). We investigate the role of the mixing by replacing
the default convective treatment used in previous works with a more physically relevant
mixing treatment (𝐾𝑧𝑧 ) based on global circulation. We find that uncertainty in the efficiency
of sedimentation through the sedimentation factor 𝑓sed plays a larger role in shaping cloud
thickness and its radiative feedback on the local gas temperatures – e.g. hot spot shift and
day-to-night side temperature gradient – than the switch in mixing treatment. We demonstrate
using our new mixing treatments that simulations with cloud scales which are a fraction of the
pressure scale height improve agreement with the observed transmission spectra, the emission
spectra, and the Spitzer 4.5 𝜇m phase curve, although our models are still unable to reproduce
the optical and UV transmission spectra. We also find that the inclusion of cloud increases
the transit asymmetry in the optical between the east and west limbs, although the difference
remains small (. 1%).
Physics and Astronomy
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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