TY - JOUR
T1 - Longitudinally asymmetric stratospheric oscillation on a tidally locked exoplanet
AU - Cohen, Maureen
AU - Bollasina, Massimo A.
AU - Palmer, Paul I.
AU - Sergeev, Denis E.
AU - Boutle, Ian A.
AU - Mayne, Nathan J.
AU - Manners, James
N1 - Funding: The authors gratefully acknowledge the funding and support provided by the Edinburgh Earth, Ecology, and Environmental Doctoral Training Partnership and the Natural Environment Research Council [grant No. NE/S007407/1]. We also kindly acknowledge our use of the Monsoon2 system, a collaborative facility supplied under the Joint Weather and Climate Research Programme, a strategic partnership between the Met Office and the Natural Environment Research Council. Our research was performed as part of the project "Using UKCA to investigate atmospheric composition on extra-solar planets (ExoChem)." This work was partly funded by the Leverhulme Trust through a research project grant [RPG-2020-82], a Science and Technology Facilities Council Consolidated Grant [ST/R000395/1] and a UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship [grant No. MR/T040866/1]. J.M. and I.A.B. acknowledge the support of a Met Office Academic Partnership secondment.
PY - 2022/5/13
Y1 - 2022/5/13
N2 - Using a three-dimensional general circulation model, we show that the atmospheric dynamics on a tidally locked Earth-like exoplanet, simulated with the planetary and orbital parameters of Proxima Centauri b, support a longitudinally asymmetric stratospheric wind oscillation (LASO), analogous to Earth's quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO). In our simulations, the LASO has a vertical extent of 35–55 km, a period of 5–6.5 months, and a peak-to-peak wind speed amplitude of −70 to +130 m s−1 with a maximum at an altitude of 41 km. Unlike the QBO, the LASO displays longitudinal asymmetries related to the asymmetric thermal forcing of the planet and to interactions with the resulting stationary Rossby waves. The equatorial gravity wave sources driving the LASO are localized in the deep convection region at the substellar point and in a jet exit region near the western terminator, unlike the QBO, for which these sources are distributed uniformly around the planet. Longitudinally, the western terminator experiences the highest wind speeds and undergoes reversals earlier than other longitudes. The antistellar point only experiences a weak oscillation with a very brief, low-speed westward phase. The QBO on Earth is associated with fluctuations in the abundances of water vapor and trace gases such as ozone, which are also likely to occur on exoplanets if these gases are present. Strong fluctuations in temperature and the abundances of atmospheric species at the terminators will need to be considered when interpreting atmospheric observations of tidally locked exoplanets.
AB - Using a three-dimensional general circulation model, we show that the atmospheric dynamics on a tidally locked Earth-like exoplanet, simulated with the planetary and orbital parameters of Proxima Centauri b, support a longitudinally asymmetric stratospheric wind oscillation (LASO), analogous to Earth's quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO). In our simulations, the LASO has a vertical extent of 35–55 km, a period of 5–6.5 months, and a peak-to-peak wind speed amplitude of −70 to +130 m s−1 with a maximum at an altitude of 41 km. Unlike the QBO, the LASO displays longitudinal asymmetries related to the asymmetric thermal forcing of the planet and to interactions with the resulting stationary Rossby waves. The equatorial gravity wave sources driving the LASO are localized in the deep convection region at the substellar point and in a jet exit region near the western terminator, unlike the QBO, for which these sources are distributed uniformly around the planet. Longitudinally, the western terminator experiences the highest wind speeds and undergoes reversals earlier than other longitudes. The antistellar point only experiences a weak oscillation with a very brief, low-speed westward phase. The QBO on Earth is associated with fluctuations in the abundances of water vapor and trace gases such as ozone, which are also likely to occur on exoplanets if these gases are present. Strong fluctuations in temperature and the abundances of atmospheric species at the terminators will need to be considered when interpreting atmospheric observations of tidally locked exoplanets.
U2 - 10.3847/1538-4357/ac625d
DO - 10.3847/1538-4357/ac625d
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85131622186
SN - 0004-637X
VL - 930
JO - The Astrophysical Journal
JF - The Astrophysical Journal
IS - 2
M1 - 152
ER -