3D climate modeling of Earth-like extrasolar planets orbiting different types of host stars
M. Godolt, J. L. Grenfell, A. Hamann-Reinus, D. Kitzmann, M. Kunze, U., Langematz, P. von Paris, A. B. C. Patzer, H. Rauer, B. Stracke

TL;DR
This study uses a 3D climate model to explore how different types of host stars affect the climate and habitability of Earth-like exoplanets, highlighting the importance of ozone heating and feedback processes.
Contribution
It introduces the first 3D climate modeling of Earth-like planets around various star types including ozone radiative heating effects, comparing results with 1D models.
Findings
Surface temperatures vary significantly with star type.
Ozone heating impacts vertical temperature structures.
3D feedback processes amplify temperature differences.
Abstract
The potential habitability of a terrestrial planet is usually defined by the possible existence of liquid water on its surface. The potential presence of liquid water depends on many factors such as, most importantly, surface temperatures. The properties of the planetary atmosphere and its interaction with the radiative energy provided by the planet's host star are thereby of decisive importance. In this study we investigate the influence of different main-sequence stars upon the climate of Earth-like extrasolar planets and their potential habitability by applying a 3D Earth climate model accounting for local and dynamical processes. The calculations have been performed for planets with Earth-like atmospheres at orbital distances where the total amount of energy received from the various host stars equals the solar constant. In contrast to previous 3D modeling studies, we include the…
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