Day and night side core cooling of a strongly irradiated giant planet
J. Budaj, I. Hubeny, A. Burrows

TL;DR
This study models the complex interactions between stellar irradiation, atmospheric properties, and heat redistribution on the cooling of giant planets, revealing conditions that lead to asymmetric day-night cooling rates.
Contribution
It introduces a consistent model coupling day and night side atmospheres, highlighting how heat redistribution efficiency affects planetary cooling asymmetry.
Findings
Night-side cools more efficiently if heat transport is inefficient or shallow.
Strong stellar irradiation reduces overall planetary cooling.
Atmospheric metallicity and stratospheres influence heat retention and cooling rates.
Abstract
The internal heat loss, or cooling, of a planet determines its structure and evolution. We study the effects of irradiation, metallicity of the atmosphere, heat redistribution, stratospheres, and the depth where the heat redistribution takes place on the atmospheric structure, the core entropy, and subsequently on the cooling of the interior of the planet. We address in a consistent fashion the coupling between the day and the night sides of a planet by means of model atmosphere calculations with heat redistribution. We assume that strong convection leads to the same entropy on the day and night sides and that gravity is the same on both hemispheres. We argue that the core cooling rates from the two hemispheres of a strongly irradiated planet may not be the same and that the difference depends on several important parameters. If the day-night heat redistribution is very efficient or if…
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