Atmospheric Circulation of Exoplanets
Adam P. Showman, James Y-K. Cho, and Kristen Menou

TL;DR
This paper reviews fundamental principles of atmospheric dynamics relevant to exoplanets, emphasizing Solar-System insights to understand diverse atmospheric behaviors on gas giants and terrestrial planets.
Contribution
It synthesizes basic atmospheric models and concepts, applying Solar-System knowledge to predict and interpret exoplanet atmospheric circulation patterns.
Findings
Large-scale east-west banding from turbulent interactions
Implications of interior and thermal structures on wind patterns
Specific dynamics of Hot Jupiters and terrestrial exoplanets
Abstract
We survey the basic principles of atmospheric dynamics relevant to explaining existing and future observations of exoplanets, both gas giant and terrestrial. Given the paucity of data on exoplanet atmospheres, our approach is to emphasize fundamental principles and insights gained from Solar-System studies that are likely to be generalizable to exoplanets. We begin by presenting the hierarchy of basic equations used in atmospheric dynamics, including the Navier-Stokes, primitive, shallow-water, and two-dimensional nondivergent models. We then survey key concepts in atmospheric dynamics, including the importance of planetary rotation, the concept of balance, and scaling arguments to show how turbulent interactions generally produce large-scale east-west banding on rotating planets. We next turn to issues specific to giant planets, including their expected interior and atmospheric thermal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
