Exploring exomoon atmospheres with an idealized general circulation model
Jacob Haqq-Misra, Ren\'e Heller

TL;DR
This study uses an idealized general circulation model to explore the climate and energy dynamics of exomoons orbiting giant planets, highlighting the effects of planetary illumination, tidal heating, and synchronous rotation on habitability.
Contribution
It introduces a simplified GCM approach to analyze exomoon climates, emphasizing the impact of planetary illumination and tidal heating on surface temperatures and potential habitability.
Findings
Polar regions warm due to planetary illumination.
Strong planetary irradiation can cause water loss and runaway greenhouse.
Synchronous rotation influences polar melting and climate dynamics.
Abstract
Recent studies have shown that large exomoons can form in the accretion disks around super-Jovian extrasolar planets. These planets are abundant at about 1 AU from Sun-like stars, which makes their putative moons interesting for studies of habitability. Technological advances could soon make an exomoon discovery with Kepler or the upcoming CHEOPS and PLATO space missions possible. Exomoon climates might be substantially different from exoplanet climates because the day-night cycles on moons are determined by the moon's synchronous rotation with its host planet. Moreover, planetary illumination at the top of the moon's atmosphere and tidal heating at the moon's surface can be substantial, which can affect the redistribution of energy on exomoons. Using an idealized general circulation model with simplified hydrologic, radiative, and convective processes, we calculate surface temperature,…
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