Simulations of idealised 3D atmospheric flows on terrestrial planets using LFRic-Atmosphere
Sergeev, DE; Mayne, NJ; Bendell, T; et al.Boutle, IA; Brown, A; Kavcic, I; Kent, J; Kohary, K; Manners, J; Melvin, T; Olivier, E; Ragta, LK; Shipway, B; Wakelin, J; Wood, N; Zerroukat, M
Date: 10 October 2023
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Journal
Geoscientific Model Development
Publisher
European Geosciences Union / Copernicus Publications
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Abstract
We demonstrate that LFRic-Atmosphere, a model built using the Met Office’s GungHo dynamical core, is able to
reproduce idealised large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns specified by several widely-used benchmark recipes. This is
motivated by the rapid rate of exoplanet discovery and the ever-growing need for numerical modelling ...
We demonstrate that LFRic-Atmosphere, a model built using the Met Office’s GungHo dynamical core, is able to
reproduce idealised large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns specified by several widely-used benchmark recipes. This is
motivated by the rapid rate of exoplanet discovery and the ever-growing need for numerical modelling and characterisation of
their atmospheres. Here we present LFRic-Atmosphere’s results for the idealised tests imitating circulation regimes commonly
used in the exoplanet modelling community. The benchmarks include three analytic forcing cases: the standard Held-Suarez
test, the Menou-Rauscher Earth-like test, and the Merlis-Schneider Tidally Locked Earth test. Qualitatively, LFRic-Atmosphere
agrees well with other numerical models and shows excellent conservation properties in terms of total mass, angular momentum
and kinetic energy. We then use LFRic-Atmosphere with a more realistic representation of physical processes (radiation,
subgrid-scale mixing, convection, clouds) by configuring it for the four TRAPPIST-1 Habitable Atmosphere Intercomparison
(THAI) scenarios. This is the first application of LFRic-Atmosphere to a possible climate of a confirmed terrestrial exoplanet.
LFRic-Atmosphere reproduces the THAI scenarios within the spread of the existing models across a range of key climatic
variables. Our work shows that LFRic-Atmosphere performs well in the seven benchmark tests for terrestrial atmospheres,
justifying its use in future exoplanet climate studies
Physics and Astronomy
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's licence is described as © Author(s) 2023. Open access. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.