Irradiated Atmospheres IV: Effect of Mixing Heat Flux on Chemistry
Zhen-Tai Zhang, Wei Zhong, Wei Wang, Jianheng Guo, Xianyu Tan, Bo Ma, Ruyi Wei, and Cong Yu

TL;DR
This study explores how mixing-induced heat flux impacts atmospheric chemistry in exoplanets, revealing that it significantly alters species abundances and quenching levels, which is crucial for accurate atmospheric modeling.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the effects of mixing heat flux on atmospheric composition and highlights the importance of including this factor in exoplanet atmospheric models.
Findings
Mixing heat flux alters species abundances in the lower atmosphere.
Quenching levels' positions influence upper atmosphere chemistry.
Increased mixing heat flux decreases CH4, H2O, and NH3 in the lower atmosphere.
Abstract
Vertical mixing disrupts the thermochemical equilibrium and introduces additional heat flux that alters exoplanetary atmospheric temperatures. We investigate how this mixing-induced heat flux affects atmospheric chemistry. Temperature increase in the lower atmosphere by the mixing-induced heat flux alters species abundances there and modifies those in the upper atmosphere through vertical transport. In the lower atmosphere, most species follow thermodynamic equilibrium with temperature changes. In the upper layers, species mixing ratios depend on the positions of quenching levels relative to the regions exhibiting significant mixing-induced temperature variations. When the quenching level resides within such region (e.g. CO, , and with strong mixing), the mixing ratios in the upper atmosphere are modified due to changes in the quenched ratios affected by the…
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