Modeling and Simulation of Planetary Atmospheres
A special issue of Atmosphere (ISSN 2073-4433). This special issue belongs to the section "Planetary Atmospheres".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: 27 November 2024 | Viewed by 43315
Special Issue Editor
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
We have just successfully finished the first half-century of planetary exploration, and marched confidently into the second, armed with an impressive array of dynamical and chemical models developed to analyze, compare, and understand planetary atmospheres, both inside and outside our solar system.
In recognition of this milestone, the open-access journal Atmosphere is hosting a Topical Collection to showcase current planetary atmospheric models, simulation capabilities, and results. With the advent of boots-on-the-ground astronauts on Mars, as well as the planning of unmanned flying platforms, such as drones on Titan and ramjets on Jupiter, this Topical Collection is also an appropriate venue for papers that deal with the emerging field of the operational forecasting of planetary atmospheres.
Original results, review papers, and model expositions related to the simulation of planetary atmospheric dynamics and chemistry, both inside and outside our solar system, are all welcome contributions. Authors are encouraged to consider including comparative planetology and model-user accessibility in their discourse whenever appropriate, and to optionally include a section touching on future issues, opportunities, and/or concerns related to their topics, on the 5-, 10-, and 20-year horizons.
The main goals are for this Topical Collection to be a useful starting point for students, a valuable snapshot of the overarching field for practitioners, and a means of stimulating model interoperability, multidisciplinary collaborations, and new functionality, across the entire hierarchy, from idealized process modeling, to regional, global, fluid-interior, and whole-atmosphere simulations, to planetary operational forecasting.
Sincerely,
Prof. Dr. Timothy E. Dowling
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- jet streams
- polar vortices
- waves
- clouds and moist processes
- atmospheric chemistry
- tenuous atmospheres
- planetary weather forecasting
- exoplanet atmospheres
- comparative planetology
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