Planetary climate under extremely high vertical diffusivity
Yidongfang Si, Jun Yang, and Yonggang Liu

TL;DR
This study investigates how extremely high vertical ocean diffusivity, caused by strong tidal forces, influences ocean circulation and surface climate on Earth-like planets, revealing significant warming effects.
Contribution
It quantifies the impact of 10 to 100 times increased vertical diffusivity on planetary climate, linking tidal mixing to ocean circulation and surface temperature changes.
Findings
Increased diffusivity intensifies meridional overturning circulation.
Higher diffusivity leads to significant surface warming.
Ocean mixing variations moderately affect planetary climate.
Abstract
Planets with large moon(s) or those in the habitable zone of low-mass stars may experience much stronger tidal force and tide-induced ocean mixing than that on Earth. Thus, the vertical diffusivity (or, more precisely, diapycnal diffusivity) on such planets, which represents the strength of vertical mixing in the ocean, would be greater than that on Earth. In this study, we explore the effects of extremely high diffusivity on the ocean circulation and surface climate of Earth-like planets in one asynchronous rotation orbit. The response of planetary climate to 10 and 100 times greater vertical diffusivity than that found on Earth is investigated using a fully coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation model. In order to perform a clear comparison with the climate of modern Earth, Earth's orbit, land-sea configuration, and present levels of greenhouse gases are included in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes · Climate variability and models · Geology and Paleoclimatology Research
