Three-dimensional transport-induced chemistry on temperate sub-Neptune K2-18b, Part II: the combined effects of atmospheric dynamics and chemical reactions
Jiachen Liu, Duncan Christie, Jun Yang, Krisztian Kohary
TLDR
This study uses a 3D model to explore transport-induced chemistry on exoplanet K2-18b, showing how dynamics increase CO/CO2 and homogenize composition.
Key contributions
- 3D GCM shows vertical transport significantly increases CO2/CO abundance in K2-18b's upper atmosphere.
- Horizontal winds homogenize chemical composition zonally, while photospheric abundances remain consistent across rotation periods.
- Derived 1D equivalent eddy-diffusion coefficient (Kzz) for K2-18b, useful for future 1D atmospheric models.
- Synthetic transmission spectra from the model provide a comparable fit to JWST observations of K2-18b.
Why it matters
This paper provides a crucial 3D perspective on atmospheric chemistry and dynamics for temperate sub-Neptunes like K2-18b. It reveals how transport processes drastically alter chemical compositions, especially for key molecules like CO and CO2. The derived vertical mixing parameters and successful comparison with JWST data will significantly aid future exoplanet atmospheric modeling and interpretation.
Original Abstract
The upper atmospheres of temperate sub-Neptunes are strongly influenced by atmospheric dynamics due to their cool equilibrium temperature and thereby longer chemical timescales than the atmospheric dynamical timescales. In this study, we used a three-dimensional (3D) general circulation model to investigate the transport-induced disequilibrium chemistry and vertical mixing on temperate gas-rich mini-Neptunes, using K2-18b as an example. We model K2-18b assuming 180 times solar metallicity and consider it as either a synchronous or an asynchronous rotator, exploring spin-orbit resonances of 2:1, 6:1, and 10:1. We find that the vertical transport affects the chemical structure significantly, making CO$_2$ and CO more abundant ($\sim$10$^{-3}$) in the upper atmosphere compared to the chemical equilibrium abundance (<10$^{-15}$), and horizontal winds further homogenize the chemical composition zonally in this region. Molecular abundances in the photosphere generally agree across different rotation periods. We employ a passive tracer in the model to estimate the one-dimensional (1D) equivalent eddy-diffusion coefficient ($K_{zz}$) of K2-18b, providing a parameter useful for future 1D atmospheric models. Additionally, synthetic transmission spectra generated from our model are compared with the JWST observations, and we find that our model can provide a comparable fit to the observations. This work offers a 3D perspective on transport-induced chemistry on a temperate sub-Neptune and derives vertical mixing parameters to support 1D modelling.
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