Decrease in hysteresis of planetary climate for planets with long solar days
Dorian S. Abbot, Jonah Bloch-Johnson, Jade Checlair, Navah X., Farahat, R.J. Graham, David Plotkin, Predrag Popovic, and, Francisco Spaulding-Astudillo

TL;DR
This study shows that planets with long solar days experience less hysteresis in their climate transitions, which could influence their habitability and the likelihood of snowball states.
Contribution
It demonstrates that long solar days reduce climate hysteresis on tidally influenced planets, extending understanding beyond synchronous rotators.
Findings
Hysteresis decreases with increasing solar day length.
Hysteresis disappears for solar days of hundreds of Earth days.
Implications for habitability and climate cycling on exoplanets.
Abstract
The ice-albedo feedback on rapidly-rotating terrestrial planets in the habitable zone can lead to abrupt transitions (bifurcations) between a warm and a snowball (ice-covered) state, bistability between these states, and hysteresis in planetary climate. This is important for planetary habitability because snowball events may trigger rises in the complexity of life, but could also endanger complex life that already exists. Recent work has shown that planets tidally locked in synchronous rotation states will transition smoothly into the snowball state rather than experiencing bifurcations. Here we investigate the structure of snowball bifurcations on planets that are tidally influenced, but not synchronously rotating, so that they experience long solar days. We use PlaSIM, an intermediate-complexity global climate model, with a thermodynamic mixed layer ocean and the Sun's spectrum. We…
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.
