Climate instability on tidally locked exoplanets
Edwin S. Kite, Eric Gaidos, Michael Manga

TL;DR
This paper investigates two feedback mechanisms that can destabilize the climate of tidally locked exoplanets, potentially shrinking habitable zones and causing rapid, large-scale atmospheric pressure changes.
Contribution
It introduces new models for climate feedbacks on tidally locked planets, highlighting conditions that lead to climate instability and potential habitability loss.
Findings
Weathering feedback can cause rapid pressure shifts within habitable zones.
Substellar dissolution generally acts as a negative or weak positive feedback.
Climate instabilities are suppressed in atmospheres with high radiative efficiency.
Abstract
Feedbacks that can destabilize the climates of synchronously-rotating rocky planets may arise on planets with strong day-night surface temperature contrasts. Earth-like habitable-zone (HZ) planets maintain stable surface liquid water over geological time. This requires equilibrium between the temperature-dependent rate of greenhouse-gas consumption by weathering,and greenhouse-gas resupply by other processes. Detected small-radius exoplanets, and anticipated M-dwarf HZ rocky planets, are expected to be tidally locked. We investigate two feedbacks that can destabilize climate on tidally-locked planets. (1) If small changes in pressure alter the temperature distribution across a planet's surface such that the weathering rate increases when the pressure decreases, a positive feedback occurs involving increasing weathering rate near the substellar point, decreasing pressure, and increasing…
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