
We present three-dimensional atmospheric circulation models of GJ 1214b, a 2.7 Earth-radius, 6.5 Earth-mass super Earth detected by the MEarth survey. Here we explore the planet's circulation as a function of atmospheric metallicity and atmospheric composition, modeling atmospheres with a low mean-molecular weight (i.e., H2-dominated) and a high mean-molecular weight (i.e. water- and CO2-dominated). We find that atmospheres with a low mean-molecular weight have strong day-night temperature variations at pressures above the infrared photosphere that lead to equatorial superrotation. For these atmospheres, the enhancement of atmospheric opacities with increasing metallicity lead to shallower atmospheric heating, larger day-night temperature variations and hence stronger superrotation. In comparison, atmospheres with a high mean-molecular weight have larger day-night and equator-to-pole temperature variations than low mean-molecular weight atmospheres, but differences in opacity structure and energy budget lead to differences in jet structure. The circulation of a water-dominated atmosphere is dominated by equatorial superrotation, while the circulation of a CO2-dominated atmosphere is instead dominated by high-latitude jets. By comparing emergent flux spectra and lightcurves for 50x solar and water-dominated compositions, we show that observations in emission can break the degeneracy in determining the atmospheric composition of GJ 1214b. The variation in opacity with wavelength for the water-dominated atmosphere leads to large phase variations within water bands and small phase variations outside of water bands. The 50x solar atmosphere, however, yields small variations within water bands and large phase variations at other characteristic wavelengths. These observations would be much less sensitive to clouds, condensates, and hazes than transit observations.
12 pages, 11 figures, 2 tables, accepted to ApJ
planets and satellites: atmospheres, Earth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP), planets and satellites: individual, planets and satellites: composition, Molecular, FOS: Physical sciences, Astronomy & Astrophysics, Atomic, methods: numerical, Particle and Plasma Physics, Nuclear, Astronomical and Space Sciences, atmospheric effects, Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural), Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
planets and satellites: atmospheres, Earth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP), planets and satellites: individual, planets and satellites: composition, Molecular, FOS: Physical sciences, Astronomy & Astrophysics, Atomic, methods: numerical, Particle and Plasma Physics, Nuclear, Astronomical and Space Sciences, atmospheric effects, Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural), Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
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