Mechanisms of Superrotation in Slowly-Rotating and Tidally-Locked Planets
Quentin Nicolas, Geoffrey K. Vallis

TL;DR
This paper compares superrotation mechanisms in slowly rotating and tidally-locked planets, using a simplified model to analyze eddy behaviors, instabilities, and transitions between regimes.
Contribution
It provides a unified analytical framework for understanding superrotation across diverse planetary conditions, highlighting key mechanisms and transitions.
Findings
Superrotation in tidally-locked planets requires baroclinicity and low-level drag.
Not all tidally-locked regimes superrotate; some exhibit subrotation at high T_rad.
The Matsuno-Gill pattern dominates eddy forcing in superrotation regimes.
Abstract
Superrotation is a common feature of quickly rotating gas giants, slowly rotating planetary bodies, and tidally-locked planets. In this paper we compare and contrast the mechanisms of superrotation in slow rotators and tidally-locked planets. We cover a wide range of planetary properties, varying in particular the thermal Rossby number Ro_T (controlled by planetary size, rotation rate, and instellation) and a radiative relaxation timescale T_rad (which parameterizes atmospheric optical thickness). We use a two-level model that contains the principal mechanisms for superrotation in both regimes yet remains analytically tractable. Linearizations of the model elucidate the behavior of superrotation-inducing eddies. In tidally-locked planets a Matsuno-Gill-like structure organizes the eddy effects but of itself is insufficient to produce superrotation; baroclinicity and low-level drag are…
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