How does the background atmosphere affect the onset of the runaway greenhouse ?
G. Chaverot, M. Turbet, E. Bolmont, J. Leconte

TL;DR
This study investigates how background atmospheric composition influences the runaway greenhouse threshold on Earth-like planets, highlighting the role of water vapor transitions and providing refined models for predicting the outgoing longwave radiation.
Contribution
The paper develops a comprehensive 1D radiative-convective model with sensitivity tests to accurately estimate OLR in N₂+H₂O atmospheres and explains the atmospheric transitions affecting the runaway greenhouse onset.
Findings
Overshoot of OLR occurs during transition from N₂- to H₂O-dominated atmospheres.
Water absorption line broadening significantly impacts OLR calculations.
Transition from dry to moist lapse rates causes OLR overshoot.
Abstract
As the insolation of an Earth-like (exo)planet with a large amount of water increases, its surface and atmospheric temperatures also increase, eventually leading to a catastrophic runaway greenhouse transition. While some studies have shown that the onset of the runaway greenhouse may be delayed due to an overshoot of the outgoing longwave radiation (OLR) -- compared to the Simpson-Nakajima threshold -- by radiatively inactive gases, there is still no consensus on whether this is occurring and why. Here, we used a suite of 1D radiative-convective models to study the runaway greenhouse transition, with particular emphasis on taking into account the radical change in the amount of water vapour (from trace gas to dominant gas). The aim of this work is twofold: first, to determine the most important physical processes and parametrisations affecting the OLR; and second, to propose reference…
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