Meta-modelling the climate of dry tide locked rocky planets
Pierre Auclair-Desrotour, Russell Deitrick, and Kevin Heng

TL;DR
This paper introduces a General Circulation Meta-Model (GCMM) to study the climate and atmospheric stability of tidally locked rocky planets, bridging analytical and GCM approaches to better understand habitability conditions.
Contribution
The novel GCMM approach combines analytical and 3-D GCM models, providing new insights into atmospheric collapse mechanisms on tidally locked rocky planets.
Findings
Collapse pressure varies by ~40% from analytical predictions.
Turbulent diffusion in the boundary layer warms the nightside.
Slow rotation approximation is valid when Rossby radius > 2.
Abstract
Rocky planets hosted by close-in extrasolar systems are likely to be tidally locked in 1:1 spin-orbit resonance, a configuration where they exhibit permanent dayside and nightside. Because of the resulting day-night temperature gradient, the climate and large-scale circulation of these planets are strongly determined by their atmospheric stability against collapse, which designates the runaway condensation of greenhouse gases. To better constrain the surface conditions of rocky planets located in the habitable zone of their host star, it is therefore crucial to elucidate the mechanisms that govern the day-night heat redistribution. As a first attempt to bridge the gap between multiple modelling approaches ranging from idealised models to 3-D General Circulation Models (GCM), we developed a General Circulation Meta-Model (GCMM) able to reproduce both the closed-form solutions provided by…
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