Atmospheric circulation of tide-locked exoplanets

Tide-locked planets are planets in which tidal stresses from the host star have spun down the planet’s rotation to the point where its length of side-real day equals its length of year. In a nearly circular orbit, such planets have a permanent dayside and a permanent nightside, leading to extreme he...

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Main Authors: Pierrehumbert, R, Hammond, M
Format: Journal article
Published: Annual Reviews 2018
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author Pierrehumbert, R
Hammond, M
author_facet Pierrehumbert, R
Hammond, M
author_sort Pierrehumbert, R
collection OXFORD
description Tide-locked planets are planets in which tidal stresses from the host star have spun down the planet’s rotation to the point where its length of side-real day equals its length of year. In a nearly circular orbit, such planets have a permanent dayside and a permanent nightside, leading to extreme heating contrasts. In this article, the atmospheric circulations forced by this heating contrast are explored, with a focus on terrestrial planets; here, “terrestrial” refers to planets with a condensed solid or liquid surface at which most of the incident stellar radiation is absorbed and does not imply habitability in the Earthlike sense. The census of exoplanets contains many terrestrial planets that are very likely to be tide locked, including extremely hot close-orbit planets around Sunlike stars and habitable zone (and hotter) planets around lower-mass stars. The circulations are discussed in terms of fluid dynamical concepts arising from study of the Earth’s tropics, supplemented by general circulation model simulations. Even in the relatively simple context of dry (noncondensing) dynamics, there are a number of important unresolved issues that require further study.
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spelling oxford-uuid:b7f76fed-9b61-4ffc-bb94-ef576f54f72d2022-03-27T04:52:38ZAtmospheric circulation of tide-locked exoplanetsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:b7f76fed-9b61-4ffc-bb94-ef576f54f72dSymplectic Elements at OxfordAnnual Reviews2018Pierrehumbert, RHammond, MTide-locked planets are planets in which tidal stresses from the host star have spun down the planet’s rotation to the point where its length of side-real day equals its length of year. In a nearly circular orbit, such planets have a permanent dayside and a permanent nightside, leading to extreme heating contrasts. In this article, the atmospheric circulations forced by this heating contrast are explored, with a focus on terrestrial planets; here, “terrestrial” refers to planets with a condensed solid or liquid surface at which most of the incident stellar radiation is absorbed and does not imply habitability in the Earthlike sense. The census of exoplanets contains many terrestrial planets that are very likely to be tide locked, including extremely hot close-orbit planets around Sunlike stars and habitable zone (and hotter) planets around lower-mass stars. The circulations are discussed in terms of fluid dynamical concepts arising from study of the Earth’s tropics, supplemented by general circulation model simulations. Even in the relatively simple context of dry (noncondensing) dynamics, there are a number of important unresolved issues that require further study.
spellingShingle Pierrehumbert, R
Hammond, M
Atmospheric circulation of tide-locked exoplanets
title Atmospheric circulation of tide-locked exoplanets
title_full Atmospheric circulation of tide-locked exoplanets
title_fullStr Atmospheric circulation of tide-locked exoplanets
title_full_unstemmed Atmospheric circulation of tide-locked exoplanets
title_short Atmospheric circulation of tide-locked exoplanets
title_sort atmospheric circulation of tide locked exoplanets
work_keys_str_mv AT pierrehumbertr atmosphericcirculationoftidelockedexoplanets
AT hammondm atmosphericcirculationoftidelockedexoplanets