Three-dimensional atmospheric circulation of hot Jupiters on highly eccentric orbits
Tiffany Kataria, Adam P. Showman, Nikole K. Lewis, Jonathan J., Fortney, Mark S. Marley, and Richard S. Freedman

TL;DR
This study models the atmospheric dynamics of highly eccentric hot Jupiters, revealing that their circulation patterns are similar to circular orbit planets but with stronger jets and variable IR lightcurves influenced by orbital phase.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic 3D modeling of eccentric hot Jupiters, analyzing how eccentricity and stellar flux affect atmospheric circulation and observable lightcurves.
Findings
Superrotating equatorial jets are present in eccentric hot Jupiters.
Day-night temperature variations induce equatorward momentum fluxes.
IR lightcurves are significantly affected by orbital phase and planet rotation.
Abstract
Of the over 800 exoplanets detected to date, over half are on non-circular orbits, with eccentricities as high as 0.93. Such orbits lead to time-variable stellar heating, which has implications for the planet's atmospheric dynamical regime. However, little is known about this dynamical regime, and how it may influence observations. Therefore, we present a systematic study of hot Jupiters on highly eccentric orbits using the SPARC/MITgcm, a model which couples a three-dimensional general circulation model with a plane-parallel, two-stream, non-grey radiative transfer model. In our study, we vary the eccentricity and orbit-average stellar flux over a wide range. We demonstrate that the eccentric hot Jupiter regime is qualitatively similar to that of planets on circular orbits; the planets possess a superrotating equatorial jet and exhibit large day-night temperature variations. We show…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics
