Climate of High-obliquity Exoterrestrial Planets with a Three-dimensional Cloud System Resolving Climate Model

Author:

Kodama TakanoriORCID,Takasuka DaisukeORCID,Sherriff-Tadano SamORCID,Kuroda TakeshiORCID,Miyakawa TomokiORCID,Abe-Ouchi AyakoORCID,Satoh MasakiORCID

Abstract

Abstract Planetary climates are strongly affected by planetary orbital parameters such as obliquity, eccentricity, and precession. In exoplanetary systems, exoterrestrial planets should have various obliquities. High-obliquity planets would have extreme seasonal cycles due to the seasonal change of the distribution of the insolation. Here, we introduce the Non-hydrostatic ICosahedral Atmospheric Model (NICAM), a global cloud-resolving model, to investigate the climate of high-obliquity planets. This model can explicitly simulate a three-dimensional cloud distribution and vertical transports of water vapor. We simulated exoterrestrial climates with high resolution using the supercomputer FUGAKU. We assumed aqua-planet configurations with 1 bar of air as a background atmosphere, with four different obliquities (0°, 23.5°, 45°, and 60°). We ran two sets of simulations: (1) low resolution (∼220 km mesh as the standard resolution of a general circulation model for exoplanetary science) with parameterization for cloud formation, and (2) high resolution (∼14 km mesh) with an explicit cloud microphysics scheme. Results suggest that high-resolution simulations with an explicit treatment of cloud microphysics reveal warmer climates due to less low cloud fraction and a large amount of water vapor in the atmosphere. It implies that treatments of cloud-related processes lead to a difference between different resolutions in climatic regimes in cases with high obliquities.

Funder

MEXT ∣ Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Astrobiology Center of National Institute of Natural Science

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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