Exoplanet weather and climate regimes with clouds and thermal ionospheres: A model grid study in support of large-scale observational campaigns
Christiane Helling, Dominic Samra, David Lewis, Robb Calder, Georgina, Hirst, Peter Woitke, Robin Baeyens, Ludmila Carone, Oliver Herbort, Katy L., Chubb

TL;DR
This study models exoplanet atmospheres across various stellar types to identify cloud formation patterns, chemical regimes, and ionospheric properties, aiding future observational campaigns and understanding diverse planetary weather and climate regimes.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive grid of 3D GCM simulations and cloud models for different stellar host types, revealing distinct atmospheric regimes and cloud patterns on exoplanets.
Findings
Three classes of exoplanets with distinct cloud coverage and chemical properties.
Dayside cloud patterns are shaped by wind flow and irradiation, with minimal influence from surface gravity and rotation.
Deep ionospheres are present on ultra-hot planets, affecting magnetic coupling.
Abstract
With observational efforts moving from the discovery into the characterisation mode, systematic campaigns that cover large ranges of global stellar and planetary parameters will be needed. We aim to uncover cloud formation trends and globally changing chemical regimes due to the host star's effect on the thermodynamic structure of their atmospheres. We aim to provide input for exoplanet missions like JWST, PLATO, and Ariel, as well as potential UV missions ARAGO, PolStar or POLLUX. Pre-calculated 3D GCMs for M, K, G, F host stars are the input for our kinetic cloud model. Gaseous exoplanets fall broadly into three classes: i) cool planets with homogeneous cloud coverage, ii) intermediate temperature planets with asymmetric dayside cloud coverage, and iii) ultra-hot planets without clouds on the dayside. In class ii),} the dayside cloud patterns are shaped by the wind flow and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
