Habitable Climates: The Influence of Obliquity
David S. Spiegel, Kristen Menou, Caleb A. Scharf

TL;DR
This study uses an energy balance climate model to explore how obliquity affects the habitability of exoplanets, revealing complex seasonal climate behaviors and potential limits to habitability due to snowball states and atmospheric collapse.
Contribution
It demonstrates that simple climate models can effectively analyze obliquity effects and highlights the importance of short-term climate stability for planetary habitability.
Findings
High obliquity causes large seasonal climate variations.
Oblique planets are not necessarily more prone to snowball states.
CO2-rich atmospheres can undergo partial atmospheric collapse.
Abstract
Extrasolar terrestrial planets with the potential to host life might have large obliquities or be subject to strong obliquity variations. We revisit the habitability of oblique planets with an energy balance climate model (EBM) allowing for dynamical transitions to ice-covered snowball states as a result of ice-albedo feedback. Despite the great simplicity of our EBM, it captures reasonably well the seasonal cycle of global energetic fluxes at Earth's surface. It also performs satisfactorily against a full-physics climate model of a highly oblique Earth-like planet, in an unusual regime of circulation dominated by heat transport from the poles to the equator. Climates on oblique terrestrial planets can violate global radiative balance through much of their seasonal cycle, which limits the usefulness of simple radiative equilibrium arguments. High obliquity planets have severe climates,…
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