Atmospheric Circulation of Terrestrial Exoplanets
Adam P. Showman, Robin D. Wordsworth, Timothy M. Merlis, and Yohai, Kaspi

TL;DR
This paper reviews the fundamental atmospheric circulation principles of terrestrial exoplanets, exploring their climate, hydrological cycles, and implications for habitability across diverse planetary conditions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the dynamical principles governing terrestrial exoplanet atmospheres, integrating circulation, climate feedbacks, and habitability considerations.
Findings
Different circulation regimes depend on planetary rotation rates.
Circulation influences climate stability and habitability.
Key mechanisms include jet streams, Hadley cells, and superrotation.
Abstract
The investigation of planets around other stars began with the study of gas giants, but is now extending to the discovery and characterization of super-Earths and terrestrial planets. Motivated by this observational tide, we survey the basic dynamical principles governing the atmospheric circulation of terrestrial exoplanets, and discuss the interaction of their circulation with the hydrological cycle and global-scale climate feedbacks. Terrestrial exoplanets occupy a wide range of physical and dynamical conditions, only a small fraction of which have yet been explored in detail. Our approach is to lay out the fundamental dynamical principles governing the atmospheric circulation on terrestrial planets--broadly defined--and show how they can provide a foundation for understanding the atmospheric behavior of these worlds. We first survey basic atmospheric dynamics, including the role of…
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