Doppler Signatures of the Atmospheric Circulation on Hot Jupiters
Adam P. Showman, Jonathan J. Fortney, Nikole K. Lewis, and Megan, Shabram

TL;DR
This paper explores how Doppler shift measurements during transits can reveal atmospheric circulation regimes on hot Jupiters, showing how different insolation levels lead to distinct wind patterns and Doppler signatures.
Contribution
It introduces models linking atmospheric circulation regimes to observable Doppler signatures, providing a method to infer wind dynamics and drag forces on hot Jupiters.
Findings
Weak insolation leads to jet streams with mixed Doppler shifts.
Strong insolation results in day-to-night flow with a blueshifted signature.
Doppler shift amplitudes constrain upper atmospheric drag strength.
Abstract
The meteorology of hot Jupiters has been characterized primarily with thermal measurements, but recent observations suggest the possibility of directly detecting the winds by observing the Doppler shift of spectral lines seen during transit. Motivated by these observations, we show how Doppler measurements can place powerful constraints on the meteorology. We show that the atmospheric circulation--and Doppler signature--of hot Jupiters splits into two regimes. Under weak stellar insolation, the day-night thermal forcing generates fast zonal jet streams from the interaction of atmospheric waves with the mean flow. In this regime, air along the terminator (as seen during transit) flows toward Earth in some regions and away from Earth in others, leading to a Doppler signature exhibiting superposed blueshifted and redshifted components. Under intense stellar insolation, however, the strong…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
