Atmospheric circulation of hot Jupiters: Coupled radiative-dynamical general circulation model simulations of HD 189733b and HD 209458b
Adam P. Showman, Jonathan J. Fortney, Yuan Lian, Mark S. Marley,, Richard S. Freedman, Heather A. Knutson, and David Charbonneau

TL;DR
This paper presents advanced 3D simulations of hot Jupiter atmospheres, coupling dynamics with realistic radiative transfer, to better understand their circulation patterns and observational signatures.
Contribution
It introduces the SPARC model combining MITgcm dynamics with non-gray radiative transfer, providing detailed insights into hot Jupiter atmospheric circulation.
Findings
Simulations reproduce broad eastward equatorial jets.
Models match observed infrared light curves and secondary-eclipse depths.
Nonsynchronous rotation significantly affects jet structures.
Abstract
We present global, three-dimensional numerical simulations of HD 189733b and HD 209458b that couple the atmospheric dynamics to a realistic representation of non-gray cloud-free radiative transfer. The model, which we call the Substellar and Planetary Atmospheric Radiation and Circulation (SPARC) model, adopts the MITgcm for the dynamics and uses the radiative model of McKay, Marley, Fortney, and collaborators for the radiation. Like earlier work with simplified forcing, our simulations develop a broad eastward equatorial jet, mean westward flow at higher latitudes, and substantial flow over the poles at low pressure. For HD 189733b, our simulations without TiO and VO opacity can explain the broad features of the observed 8 and 24-micron light curves, including the modest day-night flux variation and the fact that the planet/star flux ratio peaks before the secondary eclipse. Our…
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