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Relatively long-period nonsynchronized planets---such as warm Jupiters---potentially retain the primordial rotation, eccentricity, and obliquity that might encapsulate information on planetary climate and formation processes. To date, there has not been a systematic study on climate patterns on these planets that will significantly influence their observations. Here we investigate the atmospheric dynamics of nonsynchronized, fast-rotating exoplanets across various radiative timescales, eccentricities, and obliquities using a shallow water model. The dynamical pattern can be demarcated into five regimes in terms of radiative timescale $tau_{rm rad}$ and obliquity ${theta}$. An atmosphere with $tau_{rm rad}$ shorter than a planetary day usually exhibits a strong day--night temperature contrast and a day-to-night flow pattern. In the intermediate $tau_{rm rad}$ regime between a planetary day and a year, the atmosphere is dominated by steady temperature and eastward jet patterns for ${theta}$ < 18 deg but shows a strong seasonal variation for ${theta}$ > 18 deg because the polar region undergoes an intense heating at around the summer solstice. If $tau_{rm rad}$ is longer than a year, seasonal variation is very weak. In this regime, eastward jets are developed for ${theta}$ < 54 deg and westward jets are developed for ${theta}$ > 54 deg. These dynamical regimes are also applicable to the planets in eccentric orbits. The large effects of exoplanetary obliquities on circulation patterns might offer observational signatures, which will be investigated in Paper II of this study.
Thermal light-curve analysis is a powerful approach to probe the thermal structures of exoplanetary atmospheres, which are greatly influenced by the planetary obliquity and eccentricity. Here we investigate the thermal light curves of eccentric-tilte
Close-in exoplanets with highly eccentric orbits are subject to large variations in incoming stellar flux between periapse and apoapse. These variations may lead to large swings in atmospheric temperature, which in turn may cause changes in the chemi
Exoplanets on eccentric orbits experience an incident stellar flux that can be markedly larger at periastron versus apoastron. This variation in instellation can lead to dramatic changes in atmospheric structure in regions of the atmosphere where the
The search for habitable exoplanets in the Universe is actively ongoing in the field of astronomy. The biggest future milestone is to determine whether life exists on such habitable exoplanets. In that context, oxygen in the atmosphere has been consi
Hydrogen cyanide (HCN) is a key feedstock molecule for the production of lifes building blocks. The formation of HCN in an N$_2$-rich atmospheres requires first that the triple bond between N$equiv$N be severed, and then that the atomic nitrogen find