Dynamics and circulation regimes of terrestrial planets

By the study of simple analogues, either in the form of simplified numerical models or laboratory experiments, considerable insights may be gained as to the likely roles of planetary size, rotation, thermal stratification and other factors in determining the principal length scales, styles of global...

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Main Author: Read, P
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2011
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author Read, P
author_facet Read, P
author_sort Read, P
collection OXFORD
description By the study of simple analogues, either in the form of simplified numerical models or laboratory experiments, considerable insights may be gained as to the likely roles of planetary size, rotation, thermal stratification and other factors in determining the principal length scales, styles of global circulation and dominant waves and instability processes active in the respective climate systems of Earth, Mars, Venus and Titan. In this review, we explore aspects of these analogues and demonstrate the importance of a number of key dimensionless parameters, most notably thermal Rossby and Rhines numbers and a measure of the dominant frictional or radiative timescale, in defining the type of circulation regime to be expected in a prototype planetary atmosphere subject to axisymmetric driving. These considerations help to place Mars, Venus, Titan and Earth into an appropriate context, and may also lay the foundations for predicting and understanding the climate and circulation regimes of (as yet undiscovered) Earth-like extra-solar planets. However, as recent discoveries of 'super-Earth' planets around some nearby stars are beginning to reveal, the parameter space determined from axisymmetrically forced prototype atmospheres may be incomplete and other factors, such as the possibility of tidally locked rotation and tidal forcing, may also need to be taken into account for some classes of extra-solar planet. © 2010 Elsevier Ltd.
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spelling oxford-uuid:9a6fcd9f-6281-4225-aa40-3f628ce0f5bc2022-03-27T00:21:19ZDynamics and circulation regimes of terrestrial planetsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:9a6fcd9f-6281-4225-aa40-3f628ce0f5bcEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2011Read, PBy the study of simple analogues, either in the form of simplified numerical models or laboratory experiments, considerable insights may be gained as to the likely roles of planetary size, rotation, thermal stratification and other factors in determining the principal length scales, styles of global circulation and dominant waves and instability processes active in the respective climate systems of Earth, Mars, Venus and Titan. In this review, we explore aspects of these analogues and demonstrate the importance of a number of key dimensionless parameters, most notably thermal Rossby and Rhines numbers and a measure of the dominant frictional or radiative timescale, in defining the type of circulation regime to be expected in a prototype planetary atmosphere subject to axisymmetric driving. These considerations help to place Mars, Venus, Titan and Earth into an appropriate context, and may also lay the foundations for predicting and understanding the climate and circulation regimes of (as yet undiscovered) Earth-like extra-solar planets. However, as recent discoveries of 'super-Earth' planets around some nearby stars are beginning to reveal, the parameter space determined from axisymmetrically forced prototype atmospheres may be incomplete and other factors, such as the possibility of tidally locked rotation and tidal forcing, may also need to be taken into account for some classes of extra-solar planet. © 2010 Elsevier Ltd.
spellingShingle Read, P
Dynamics and circulation regimes of terrestrial planets
title Dynamics and circulation regimes of terrestrial planets
title_full Dynamics and circulation regimes of terrestrial planets
title_fullStr Dynamics and circulation regimes of terrestrial planets
title_full_unstemmed Dynamics and circulation regimes of terrestrial planets
title_short Dynamics and circulation regimes of terrestrial planets
title_sort dynamics and circulation regimes of terrestrial planets
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