论文标题
用绿洲建模金星的3D气候
Modelling the 3D Climate of Venus with OASIS
论文作者
论文摘要
灵活的3D模型探索陆地行星的广泛多样性和解释观测数据仍处于早期阶段。在这项工作中,我们介绍了绿洲:一种新颖而灵活的3D虚拟星球实验室。使用OASIS,我们设想了一个平台,该平台将自以为是的七个单独的模块,代表塑造行星环境的主要物理和化学过程。此外,OASIS能够从不同的工具和观察技术中产生模拟光谱。在这项工作中,我们着重于耦合四个物理模块的基准测试:流体动力学,辐射,湍流和表面/土壤。为了测试绿洲平台,我们对金星气候及其大气循环进行了3D模拟,并研究了建模的大气如何随着各种云层覆盖,大气热容量和表面摩擦而变化。金星的3D模拟很具有挑战性,因为它们需要与计算昂贵的辐射传输代码长时间的整合时间。通过将绿洲的结果与观察数据进行比较,我们验证了新模型能够成功模拟金星。通过直接从3D模拟产生的模拟光谱,我们探索了未来任务的能力,例如Luvoir,以观察到10 pc的金星类似物。借助OASIS,我们采取了第一步来建立一个能够研究陆地行星环境的精致且非常灵活的平台,这将是表征观察到的陆地行星并计划未来观察结果的重要工具。
Flexible 3D models to explore the vast diversity of terrestrial planets and interpret observational data are still in their early stages. In this work, we present OASIS: a novel and flexible 3D virtual planet laboratory. With OASIS we envision a platform that couples self-consistently seven individual modules representing the main physical and chemical processes that shape planetary environments. Additionally, OASIS is capable of producing simulated spectra from different instruments and observational techniques. In this work we focus on the benchmark test of coupling four of the physical modules: fluid dynamics, radiation, turbulence and surface/soil. To test the OASIS platform, we produced 3D simulations of the Venus climate and its atmospheric circulation and study how the modeled atmosphere changes with various cloud covers, atmospheric heat capacity, and surface friction. 3D simulations of Venus are challenging because they require long integration times with a computationally expensive radiative transfer code. By comparing OASIS results with observational data, we verify that the new model is able to successfully simulate Venus. With simulated spectra produced directly from the 3D simulations, we explore the capabilities of future missions, like LUVOIR, to observe Venus analogs located at a distance of 10 pc. With OASIS, we have taken the first steps to build a sophisticated and very flexible platform capable of studying the environment of terrestrial planets, which will be an essential tool to characterize observed terrestrial planets and plan future observations.