Abstract
AbstractBy generalizing the theory of convection to any type of thermal and compositional source terms (diabatic processes), we show that thermohaline convection in Earth’s oceans, fingering convection in stellar atmospheres, and moist convection in Earth’s atmosphere are derived from the same general diabatic convective instability. We also show that “radiative convection” triggered by the CO/CH4 transition with radiative transfer in the atmospheres of brown dwarfs is analogous to moist and thermohaline convection. We derive a generalization of the mixing-length theory to include the effect of source terms in 1D codes. We show that CO/CH4“radiative” convection could significantly reduce the temperature gradient in the atmospheres of brown dwarfs similarly to moist convection in Earth’s atmosphere, thus possibly explaining the reddening in brown dwarf spectra. By using idealized 2D hydrodynamic simulations in the Ledoux unstable regime, we show that compositional source terms can indeed provoke a reduction of the temperature gradient. The L/T transition could be explained by a bifurcation between the adiabatic and diabatic convective transports and seen as a giant cooling crisis: an analog of the boiling crisis in liquid/steam-water convective flows. This mechanism, with other chemical transitions, could be present in many giant and Earth-like exoplanets. The study of the impact of different parameters (effective temperature, compositional changes) on CO/CH4radiative convection and the analogy with Earth moist and thermohaline convection is opening the possibility of using brown dwarfs to better understand some aspects of the physics at play in the climate of our own planet.
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