Energy balance models (EBMs), alongside radiative-convective climate models
(RCMs) and global climate models (GCMs), are useful tools for simulating
planetary climates. Historically, planetary and exoplanetary EBMs have solely
been 1D latitudinally-dependent models with no longitudinal dependence, until
the study of Okuya et al., which focused on simulating synchronously-rotating
planets. Following the work of Okuya et al., I have designed the first 2D EBM
(PlaHab) that can simulate N2-CO2-H2O-H2 atmospheres of both rapidly-rotating
and synchronously-rotating planets, including Mars, Earth, and exoplanets
located within their circumstellar habitable zones. PlaHab includes physics for
both water and CO2 condensation. Regional topography can be incorporated. Here,
I have specifically applied PlaHab to investigate present Earth, early Mars,
TRAPPIST-1e and Proxima Centauri b, representing examples of habitable (and
potentially habitable) worlds in our solar system and beyond. I compare my EBM
results against those of other 1D and 3D models, including those of the recent
Trappist-1 Habitable Atmosphere (THAI) comparison project. Overall, EBM results
are consistent with those of other 1D and 3D models although inconsistencies
among all models continue to be related to the treatment of clouds and other
known differences between EBMs and GCMs, including heat transport
parameterizations. Although two-dimensional EBMs are a relatively new entry in
the study of planetary/exoplanetary climates, their ease-of-use, speed,
flexibility, wide applicability, and greater complexity (relative to 1D
models), may indicate an ideal combination for the modeling of planetary and
exoplanetary atmospheres alike.Comment: Accepted into The Planetary Science Journal (35 pages, 12 Figures, 4
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