Europlanet Science Congress 2020
Virtual meeting
21 September – 9 October 2020
Europlanet Science Congress 2020
Virtual meeting
21 September – 9 October 2020
EPSC Abstracts
Vol. 14, EPSC2020-505, 2020
https://doi.org/10.5194/epsc2020-505
Europlanet Science Congress 2020
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Investigating the Dynamics of Hothouse Earth Climates with a Simplified GCM

Matthew McKinney1 and Jonathan Mitchell1,2
Matthew McKinney and Jonathan Mitchell
  • 1Atmospheric & Oceanic Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, USA
  • 2Earth, Planetary, and Space Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, USA

There are records of past Earth climates that were ice-free all the way to the poles (Barron 1983), which can be described as “hothouse” climates. These hothouse climates can be contrasted with an “all-tropics” planet, where the tropics are defined by the atmospheric dynamics, i.e. the Hadley Cell extent (Faulk et al. 2017). This classification is thus primarily dependent on a planet’s rotation, rather than its ice-free extent or surface temperatures. We investigate the parameter space between Earth and an all-tropics world using the open-source GCM Isca, developed by Vallis et al (2018). We take an Earth analog and perform a parameter sweep in three dimensions: global reservoir depth (1000m, 100m, 10m, 1m, 1cm); global saturation vapor pressure (1.5x current, 1.4x, 1.3x, 1.2x, 1.1x, 1x); and rotation rate (16 days, 8 days, 1 day). The sweep will allow us to explore the effects of surface liquid coverage, atmospheric moisture content, and large-scale atmospheric circulation on an Earth-like climate. In this presentation we provide a status report and analysis of initial findings.

How to cite: McKinney, M. and Mitchell, J.: Investigating the Dynamics of Hothouse Earth Climates with a Simplified GCM, Europlanet Science Congress 2020, online, 21 Sep–9 Oct 2020, EPSC2020-505, https://doi.org/10.5194/epsc2020-505, 2020.