Patchy nightside clouds on ultra-hot Jupiters: General Circulation Model simulations with radiatively active cloud tracers
Thaddeus D. Komacek, Xianyu Tan, Peter Gao, Elspeth K.H. Lee

TL;DR
This study uses advanced climate models to simulate patchy, radiatively active clouds on ultra-hot Jupiters, revealing their effects on atmospheric dynamics and observable spectra, especially phase-dependent emission features.
Contribution
It introduces radiatively active cloud tracers into GCM simulations, demonstrating the formation of patchy clouds and their impact on atmospheric temperature and spectra.
Findings
Patchy clouds are common due to atmospheric dynamics.
Clouds cause a greenhouse effect warming the atmosphere.
Clouds influence phase-dependent emission spectra.
Abstract
The atmospheres of ultra-hot Jupiters have been characterized in detail through recent phase curve and low- and high-resolution emission and transmission spectroscopic observations. Previous numerical studies have analyzed the effect of the localized recombination of hydrogen on the atmospheric dynamics and heat transport of ultra-hot Jupiters, finding that hydrogen dissociation and recombination lead to a reduction in the day-to-night contrasts of ultra-hot Jupiters relative to previous expectations. In this work, we add to previous efforts by also considering the localized condensation of clouds in the atmospheres of ultra-hot Jupiters, their resulting transport by the atmospheric circulation, and the radiative feedback of clouds on the atmospheric dynamics. To do so, we include radiatively active cloud tracers into the existing MITgcm framework for simulating the atmospheric dynamics…
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