Habitability and Multistability in Earth-like Planets
Valerio Lucarini, Salvatore Pascale, Robert Boschi, Edilbert Kirk,, Nicolas Iro

TL;DR
This study investigates the multistability of Earth-like planetary climates, analyzing how thermodynamics and rotation rate influence climate states, with implications for planetary habitability and climate transitions.
Contribution
It introduces a general methodology for assessing climate multistability on exoplanets, emphasizing thermodynamic properties and the impact of rotation rate on climate states.
Findings
Multistability can reproduce snowball and warm climate states.
Thermodynamics clarifies the role of the hydrological cycle in climate irreversibility.
Critical rotation rate determines the loss of multistability, affecting habitability conditions.
Abstract
We explore the potential multistability of the climate for a planet around the habitable zone. We focus on conditions reminiscent to those of the Earth system, but our investigation aims at presenting a general methodology for dealing with exoplanets. We provide a thorough analysis of the non-equilibrium thermodynamical properties of the climate system and explore, using a a flexible climate model, how such properties depend on the energy input of the parent star, on the infrared atmospheric opacity, and on the rotation rate. It is possible to reproduce the multi-stability properties reminiscent of the paleoclimatologically relevant snowball (SB) - warm (W) conditions. We then study the thermodynamics of the W and SB states, clarifying the role of the hydrological cycle in shaping the irreversibility and the efficiency of the W states, and emphasizing the extreme diversity of the SB…
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