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      Regime transition between eddy-driven and moist-driven circulation on High Obliquity Planets

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          Abstract

          We investigate how the meridional circulation and baroclinic eddies change with insolation and rotation rate, under high and zero obliquity setups, using a general circulation model. The total circulation is considered as superposition of circulations driven by different physics processes, such as diabatic and adiabatic processes. We decompose the meridional circulation into diabatic and adiabatic components, in order to understand their different responses to changes of insolation and rotation rate. As insolation or rotation period increases, the meridional circulation tends to become more diabatically dominant, regardless of the obliquity. The low obliquity circulation is always dominated by diabatic processes, while the high obliquity configuration has two circulation regimes: an adiabatic-dominant regime in the limit of low insolation and fast rotation, and a diabatic-dominant regime in the opposite limit. This regime transition may be observable via its signature on the upper atmospheric zonal wind and the column cloud cover. The momentum-driven circulation, the dominant circulation component in the weak-insolation and fast-rotating regimes is found to resemble that in a dry dynamic model forced by a reversed meridional temperature gradient, indicating the relevance of using a dry dynamic model to understand planetary general circulations under high obliquity.

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          Most cited references11

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          Loss of water from Venus. I. Hydrodynamic escape of hydrogen

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            Climate of Earth-like planets with high obliquity and eccentric orbits: Implications for habitability conditions

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              Obliquity-driven sculpting of exoplanetary systems

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                22 October 2019
                Article
                10.3847/1538-4357/ab3fa2
                1910.10250
                9cac1147-5195-40f2-81cb-fe90ffbc7b98

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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                Custom metadata
                The Astrophysical Journal, 884(1), 89 (2019)
                astro-ph.EP

                Planetary astrophysics
                Planetary astrophysics

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