The acceleration of superrotation in simulated hot Jupiter atmospheres
Debras, F; Mayne, N; Baraffe, I; et al.Jaupart, E; Mourier, P; Laibe, G; Goffrey, T; Thuburn, J
Date: 15 November 2019
Journal
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Publisher
EDP Sciences
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Context. Atmospheric superrotating flows at the equator are a nearly ubiquitous result when conducting simulations of hot Jupiters.
One theory explaining how this zonally-coherent flow reaches equilibrium has already been developed in the literature. This understanding, however, relies on the existence of either an initial superrotating ...
Context. Atmospheric superrotating flows at the equator are a nearly ubiquitous result when conducting simulations of hot Jupiters.
One theory explaining how this zonally-coherent flow reaches equilibrium has already been developed in the literature. This understanding, however, relies on the existence of either an initial superrotating flow or a sheared flow, coupled with a slow evolution that
permits a linear steady state to be reached.
Aims. A consistent physical understanding of superrotation is needed for arbitrary drag and radiative timescales, along with the
relevance of taking linear steady states into account, needs to be assessed.
Methods. We obtained an analytical expression for the structure, frequency, and decay rate of propagating waves in hot Jupiter
atmospheres around a state at rest in the 2D shallow-water β–plane limit. We solved this expression numerically and confirmed the
robustness of our results with a 3D linear wave algorithm. We then compared it with 3D simulations of hot Jupiter atmospheres and
studied the nonlinear momentum fluxes.
Results. We show that under strong day-night heating, the dynamics do not transit through a linear steady state when starting from an
initial atmosphere in solid body rotation. We further demonstrate that non–linear effects favor the initial spin-up of superrotation and
that acceleration due to the vertical component of the eddy–momentum flux is critical to the initial development of superrotation .
Conclusions. We describe the initial phases of the acceleration of superrotation, including the consideration of differing radiative
and drag timescales, and we conclude that eddy-momentum-driven superrotating equatorial jets are robust, physical phenomena in
simulations of hot Jupiter atmospheres.
Physics and Astronomy
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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