Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor Instability and the structure of clouds in planetary atmospheres
P. Tremblin, H. Bloch, M. Gonz\'alez, E. Audit, S. Fromang, T., Padioleau, P. Kestener, and S. Kokh

TL;DR
This paper introduces the Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor Instability (RRTI), a new instability mechanism driven by radiative transfer in stratified planetary atmospheres, with implications for cloud formation and stability across diverse exoplanets and solar system planets.
Contribution
It provides an analytical and numerical investigation of RRTI, revealing its conditions and effects on cloud stability in planetary atmospheres with varying radiative properties.
Findings
RRTI occurs at opacity discontinuities in stratified media.
Stability depends on the temperature gradient and opacity layering.
Implications for cloud patterns in exoplanets and solar system planets.
Abstract
Clouds are expected to form in a wide range of conditions in the atmosphere of exoplanets given the large range of possible condensible species. However this diversity might lead to very different small-scale dynamics depending on radiative transfer in various thermal conditions: we aim at providing some insights into these dynamical regimes. We perform an analytical linear stability analysis of a compositional discontinuity with a heating source term that depends on composition. We also perform idealized two-dimensional (2D) simulations of an opacity discontinuity in a stratified medium with the code ARK. We use a two-stream grey model for radiative transfer and explore the brown-dwarf and earth-like regimes. We reveal the existence of a Radiative Rayleigh-Taylor Instability (RRTI hereafter, a particular case of diabatic Rayleigh-Taylor instability) when an opacity discontinuity is…
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