A High-performance Atmospheric Radiation Package: with applications to the radiative energy budgets of giant planets
Cheng Li, Tianhao Le, Xi Zhang, Yuk L. Yung

TL;DR
HARP is an open-source, high-performance radiative transfer package designed for planetary atmospheres, capable of flexible modeling and applied to analyze the radiative energy budgets of giant planets, revealing new insights into their atmospheric energy dynamics.
Contribution
This work introduces HARP, a versatile, parallelized radiative transfer tool that improves modeling flexibility and computational efficiency for planetary atmospheres.
Findings
Jupiter's radiative heating and cooling rates align with previous studies.
Saturn exhibits a near-perfect energy balance between heating and cooling.
Uranus and Neptune show a significant energy deficit in their stratospheres.
Abstract
A High-performance Atmospheric Radiation Package (HARP) is developed for studying multiple-scattering planetary atmospheres. HARP is an open-source program written in C++ that utilizes high-level data structure and parallel-computing algorithms. It is generic in three aspects. First, the construction of the model atmospheric profile is generic. The program can either take in an atmospheric profile or construct an adiabatic thermal and compositional profile, taking into account the clouds and latent heat release due to condensation. Second, the calculation of opacity is generic, based on line-by-line molecular transitions and tabulated continuum data, along with a table of correlated-k opacity provided as an option to speed up the calculation of energy fluxes. Third, the selection of the solver for the radiative transfer equation is generic. The solver is not hardwired in the program.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate · Astro and Planetary Science · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics
