Atmospheric electrification in dusty, reactive gases in the solar system and beyond
Ch. Helling, R.G. Harrison, F. Honary, D.A. Diver, K. Aplin, I., Dobbs-Dixon, U. Ebert, S. Inutsuka, F.J. Gordillo-Vazquez, S. Littlefair

TL;DR
This paper explores atmospheric electrification processes across solar system planets, extrasolar planets, and brown dwarfs, highlighting their similarities in physical mechanisms and emission phenomena despite diverse conditions.
Contribution
It provides an interdisciplinary analysis of electrification and its environmental feedback in planetary atmospheres, extending understanding beyond Earth to exoplanets and brown dwarfs.
Findings
Similar physical processes drive cloud formation across objects.
Radio and X-ray emissions suggest electron acceleration mechanisms.
Electrification impacts atmospheric dynamics and emission signatures.
Abstract
Detailed observations of the solar system planets reveal a wide variety of local atmospheric conditions. Astronomical observations have revealed a variety of extrasolar planets none of which resembles any of the solar system planets in full. Instead, the most massive amongst the extrasolar planets, the gas giants, appear very similar to the class of (young) Brown Dwarfs which are amongst the oldest objects in the universe. Despite of this diversity, solar system planets, extrasolar planets and Brown Dwarfs have broadly similar global temperatures between 300K and 2500K. In consequence, clouds of different chemical species form in their atmospheres. While the details of these clouds differ, the fundamental physical processes are the same. Further to this, all these objects were observed to produce radio and X-ray emission. While both kinds of radiation are well studied on Earth and to a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
