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1 \section{Adjoint sensitivities of the MITsim}
2 \label{sec:adjoint}
3
4 \subsection{The adjoint of MITsim}
5
6 The adjoint model of the MITgcm has become an invaluable
7 tool for sensitivity analysis as well as state estimation \citep[for a
8 recent summary, see][]{heim:08}. The code has been developed and
9 tailored to be readily used with automatic differentiation tools for
10 adjoint code generation. This route was also taken in developing and
11 adapting the sea-ice compontent MITsim, so that tangent linear and
12 adjoint components can be obtained and kept up to date without
13 excessive effort.
14
15 The adjoint model operator (ADM) is the transpose of the tangent
16 linear model operator (TLM) of the full (in general nonlinear) forward
17 model, in this case the MITsim. This operator computes the gradients
18 of scalar-valued model diagnostics (so-called cost function or
19 objective function) with respect to many model inputs (so-called
20 independent or control variables). These inputs can be two- or
21 three-dimensional fields of initial conditions of the ocean or sea-ice
22 state, model parameters such as mixing coefficients, or time-varying
23 surface or lateral (open) boundary conditions. When combined, these
24 variables span a potentially high-dimensional (e.g. O(10$^8$))
25 so-called control space. At this problem dimension, perturbing
26 individual parameters to assess model sensitivities quickly becomes
27 prohibitive. By contrast, transient sensitivities of the objective
28 function to any element of the control and model state space can be
29 computed very efficiently in one single adjoint model integration,
30 provided an adjoint model is available.
31
32 In anology to the TLM and ADM components of the MITgcm we rely on the
33 autmomatic differentiation (AD) tool ``Transformation of Algorithms in
34 Fortran'' (TAF) developed by Fastopt \citep{gier-kami:98} to generate
35 TLM and ADM code of the MITsim \citep[for details see][]{maro-etal:99,
36 heim-etal:05}. In short, the AD tool uses the nonlinear parent
37 model code to generate derivative code for the specified control space
38 and objective function. Advantages of this approach have been pointed
39 out, for example by \cite{gier-kami:98}.
40
41 Many issues of generating efficient exact adjoint sea-ice code are
42 similar to those for the ocean model's adjoint. Linearizing the model
43 around the exact nonlinear model trajectory is a crucial aspect in the
44 presence of different regimes (e.g., is the thermodynamic growth term
45 for sea-ice evaluated near or far away from the freezing point of the
46 ocean surface?). Adapting the (parent) model code to support the AD
47 tool in providing exact and efficient adjoint code represents the main
48 work load initially. For legacy code, this task may become
49 substantial, but it is fairly straightforward when writing new code
50 with an AD tool in mind. Once this initial task is completed,
51 generating the adjoint code of a new model configuration takes about
52 10 minutes.
53
54 [HIGHLIGHT COUPLED NATURE OF THE ADJOINT!]
55
56 \subsection{Special considerations}
57
58 * growth term(?)
59
60 * small active denominators
61
62 * dynamic solver (implicit function theorem)
63
64 * approximate adjoints
65
66
67 \subsection{An example: sensitivities of sea-ice export through
68 the Lancaster Sound}
69
70 We demonstrate the power of the adjoint method in the context of
71 investigating sea-ice export sensitivities through Lancaster Sound.
72 The rationale for doing so is to complement the analysis of sea-ice
73 dynamics in the presence of narrow straits. Lancaster Sound is one of
74 the main paths of sea-ice flowing through the Canadian Arctic
75 Archipelago (CAA). Export sensitivities reflect dominant pathways
76 through the CAA as resolved by the model. Sensitivity maps can shed a
77 very detailed light on various quantities affecting the sea-ice export
78 (and thus the underlying pathways). Note that while the dominant
79 circulation through Lancaster Sound is toward the East, there is a
80 small Westward flow to the North, hugging the coast of Devon Island
81 \citep{mell:02, mich-etal:06,muen-etal:06}, which is not resolved in
82 our simulation.
83
84 The model domain is the same as the one described in \refsec{forward},
85 but with halved horizontal resolution.
86 The adjoint models run efficiently on 80 processors (as validated
87 by benchmarks on both an SGI Altix and an IBM SP5 at NASA/ARC).
88 Following a 4-year spinup (1985 to 1988), the model is integrated for four
89 years and nine months between January 1989 and September 1993.
90 It is forced using realistic 6-hourly NCEP/NCAR atmospheric state variables.
91 %Over the open ocean these are
92 %converted into air-sea fluxes via the bulk formulae of
93 %\citet{large04}. The air-sea fluxes in the presence of
94 %sea-ice are handled by the ice model as described in \refsec{model}.
95 The objective function $J$ is chosen as the ``solid'' fresh water
96 export, that is the export of ice and snow converted to units of fresh
97 water,
98 %
99 \begin{equation}
100 J \, = \, (\rho_{i} h_{i}c + \rho_{s} h_{s}c)\,u
101 \end{equation}
102 %
103 through Lancaster Sound at approximately 82\degW\ (cross-section G in
104 \reffig{arctic_topog}) averaged \ml{PH: Maybe integrated quantity is
105 more physical; ML: what did you actually compute? I did not scale
106 anything, yet. Please insert what is actually done.} over the final
107 12-month of the integration between October 1992 and September 1993.
108
109 The forward trajectory of the model integration resembles broadly that
110 of the model in \refsec{forward}. Many details are different, owning
111 to different resolution and integration period; for example, the solid
112 fresh water transport through Lancaster Sound is
113 %
114 \ml{PH: Martin, where did you get these numbers from?}
115 \ml{[ML: I computed hu = -sum((SIheff+SIhsnow)*SIuice*area)/sum(area) at
116 $i=100,j=116:122$, and then took mean(hu) and std(hu). What are your numbers?]}
117 %
118 $116\pm101\text{\,km$^{3}$\,y$^{-1}$}$ for a free slip simulation with
119 the C-LSOR solver, but only $39\pm64\text{\,km$^{3}$\,y$^{-1}$}$ for a
120 no slip simulation. \ml{[Here we can say that the export through
121 Lancaster Sound is highly uncertain, making is a perfect candidate
122 for sensitivity, bla bla?]}
123
124 The adjoint model is the transpose of the tangent linear (or Jacobian) model
125 operator. It runs backwards in time, from September 1993 to
126 January 1989. During its integration it accumulates the Lagrange multipliers
127 of the model subject to the objective function (solid freshwater export),
128 which can be interpreted as sensitivities of the objective function
129 to each control variable and each element of the intermediate
130 coupled model state variables.
131 Thus, all sensitivity elements of the coupled
132 ocean/sea-ice model state as well as the surface atmospheric state are
133 available for analysis of the transient sensitivity behavior. Over the
134 open ocean, the adjoint of the bulk formula scheme computes
135 sensitivities to the time-varying atmospheric state. Over ice-covered
136 areas, the sea-ice adjoint converts surface ocean sensitivities to
137 atmospheric sensitivities.
138
139 DISCUSS FORWARD STATE, INCLUDING SOME NUMBERS ON SEA-ICE EXPORT
140
141 \subsubsection{Adjoint sensitivities}
142
143 The most readily interpretable ice-export sensitivity is that to
144 effective ice thickness, $\partial{J} / \partial{(hc)}$.
145 \reffig{adjheff} shows transient $\partial{J} / \partial{(hc)}$ using
146 free-slip (left column) and no-slip (right column) boundary
147 conditions. Sensitivity snapshots are depicted for beginning of October 1992,
148 that is 12 months before September 1993
149 (the beginning of the averaging period for the objective
150 function $J$, top),
151 and for Jannuary 1989, the beginning of the forward integration (bottom).
152 \begin{figure*}[t]
153 \includegraphics*[width=\textwidth]{\fpath/adjheff}
154 \caption{Sensitivity $\partial{J}/\partial{(hc)}$ in
155 m$^2$\,s$^{-1}$/m for two different times (rows) and two different
156 boundary conditions for sea ice drift. The color scale is chosen
157 to illustrate the patterns of the sensitivities; the maximum and
158 minimum values are given above the figures.
159 \label{fig:adjheff}}
160 \end{figure*}
161
162 The sensitivity patterns for effective ice thickness are predominantly positive.
163 An increase in ice volume in most places ``upstream'' of
164 Lancaster sound increases the solid fresh water export at the exit section.
165 The transient nature of the sensitivity patterns
166 (top panels vs. bottom panels) is also obvious:
167 the area upstream of the Lancaster Sound that
168 contributes to the export sensitivity is larger in the earlier snapshot.
169 In the free slip case, the sensivity follows (backwards in time) the dominant pathway
170 through the Barrow Strait
171 into the Viscount Melville Sound, and from there trough the M'Clure Strait
172 into the Arctic Ocean (the ``Northwest Passage''). \ml{[Is that really
173 the Northwest Passage? I thought it would turn south in Barrow
174 Strait, but I am easily convinced because it makes a nicer story.]}
175 Secondary paths are northward from the
176 Viscount Melville Sound through the Byam Martin Channel into
177 the Prince Gustav Adolf Sea and through the Penny Strait into the
178 MacLean Strait. \ml{[Patrick, all these names, if mentioned in the
179 text need to be included somewhere in a figure (i.e. fig1). Can you
180 either do this in fig1 (based on martins\_figs.m) or send me a map
181 where these names are visible so I can do this unambiguously. I
182 don't know where Byam
183 Martin Channel, Prince Gustav Adolf Sea, Penny Strait, MacLean
184 Strait, Ballantyne St., Massey Sound are.]}
185
186 There are large differences between the free slip and no slip
187 solution. By the end of the adjoint integration in January 1989, the
188 no slip sensitivities (bottom right) are generally weaker than the
189 free slip sensitivities and hardly reach beyond the western end of the
190 Barrow Strait. In contrast, the free-slip sensitivities (bottom left)
191 extend through most of the CAA and into the Arctic interior, both to
192 the West (M'Clure St.) and to the North (Ballantyne St., Prince
193 Gustav Adolf Sea, Massey Sound), because in this case the ice can
194 drift more easily through narrow straits, so that a positive ice
195 volume anomaly anywhere upstream in the CAA increases ice export
196 through the Lancaster Sound within the simulated 4 year period.
197
198 One peculiar feature in the October 1992 sensitivity maps (top panels)
199 are the negative sensivities to the East and to the West of the
200 Lancaster Sound.
201 These can be explained by indirect effects: less ice to the East means
202 less resistance to eastward drift and thus more export; similarly, less ice to
203 the West means that more ice can be moved eastwards from the Barrow Strait
204 into the Lancaster Sound leading to more ice export.
205 \ml{PH: The first explanation (East) I buy, the second (West) I
206 don't.} \ml{[ML: unfortunately, I don't have anything better to
207 offer, do you? Keep in mind that these sensitivites are very small
208 and only show up, because of the colorscale. In Fig6, they are
209 hardly visible.]}
210
211 The temporal evolution of several ice export sensitivities (eqn. XX,
212 \ml{[which equation do you mean?]}) along a zonal axis through
213 Lancaster Sound, Barrow Strait, and Melville Sound (115\degW\ to
214 80\degW, averaged across the passages) are depicted as Hovmueller
215 diagrams in \reffig{lancasteradj}. These are, from top to bottom, the
216 sensitivities with respect to effective ice thickness ($hc$), ocean
217 surface temperature ($SST$) and precipitation ($p$) for free slip
218 (left column) and no slip (right column) ice drift boundary
219 conditions.
220 %
221 \begin{figure*}
222 \includegraphics*[height=.8\textheight]{\fpath/lancaster_adj}
223 \caption{Hovermoeller diagrams along the axis Viscount Melville
224 Sound/Barrow Strait/Lancaster Sound. The diagrams show the
225 sensitivities (derivatives) of the ``solid'' fresh water (i.e.,
226 ice and snow) export $J$ through Lancaster sound
227 (\reffig{arctic_topog}, cross-section G) with respect to effective
228 ice thickness ($hc$), ocean surface temperature (SST) and
229 precipitation ($p$) for two runs with free slip and no slip
230 boundary conditions for the sea ice drift. Each plot is overlaid
231 with the contours 1 and 3 of the normalized ice strengh
232 $P/P^*=(hc)\,\exp[-C\,(1-c)]$ for orientation.
233 \label{fig:lancasteradj}}
234 \end{figure*}
235 %
236 \begin{figure*}
237 \includegraphics*[height=.8\textheight]{\fpath/lancaster_fwd}
238 \caption{Hovermoeller diagrams along the axis Viscount Melville
239 Sound/Barrow Strait/Lancaster Sound of effective ice thickness
240 ($hc$), effective snow thickness ($h_{s}c$) and normalized ice
241 strengh $P/P^*=(hc)\,\exp[-C\,(1-c)]$ for two runs with free slip
242 and no slip boundary conditions for the sea ice drift. Each plot
243 is overlaid with the contours 1 and 3 of the normalized ice
244 strength for orientation.
245 \label{fig:lancasterfwd}}
246 \end{figure*}
247 %
248
249 The Hovmoeller diagrams of ice thickness (top row) and sea surface temperature
250 (second row) sensitivities are coherent:
251 more ice in the Lancaster Sound leads
252 to more export, and one way to get more ice is by colder surface
253 temperatures (less melting from below). In the free slip case the
254 sensitivities spread out in "pulses" following a seasonal cycle:
255 ice can propagate eastwards (forward in time and thus sensitivites can
256 propagate westwards (backwards in time) when the ice strength is low
257 in late summer to early autumn.
258 In contrast, during winter, the sensitivities show little to now
259 westward propagation, as the ice is frozen solid and does not move.
260 In the no slip case the (normalized)
261 ice strength does not fall below 1 during the winters of 1991 to 1993
262 (mainly because the ice concentrations remain near 100\%, not
263 shown). Ice is therefore blocked and cannot drift eastwards
264 (forward in time) through the Viscount
265 Melville Sound, Barrow Strait, Lancaster Sound channel system.
266 Consequently, the sensitivities do not propagate westwards (backwards in
267 time) and the export through Lancaster Sound is only affected by
268 local ice formation and melting for the entire integration period.
269
270 The sensitivities to precipitation exhibit an oscillatory behaviour:
271 they are negative (more precipitation leads to less export)
272 before January (more precisely, late fall) and mostly positive after January
273 (more precisely, January through July).
274 Times of positive sensitivities coincide with times of
275 normalized ice strengths exceeding values of 3
276 %
277 \ml{PH: Problem is, that's not true for the first two years (backward),
278 east of 95\degW, that is, in the Lancaster Sound.
279 For example, at 90\degW\ the sensitivities are negative throughout 1992,
280 and no clear correlation to ice strength is apparent there.}
281 except between 95\degW\ and 85\degW, which is an area of
282 increased snow cover in spring. \ml{[ML: and no, I cannot explain
283 that. Can you?]}
284
285 %
286 Assuming that most precipation is snow in this area\footnote{
287 In the
288 current implementation the model differentiates between snow and rain
289 depending on the thermodynamic growth rate; when it is cold enough for
290 ice to grow, all precipitation is assumed to be snow.}
291 %
292 the sensitivities can be interpreted in terms of the model physics.
293 The accumulation of snow directly increases the exported volume.
294 Further, short wave radiation cannot penetrate the snow cover and has
295 a higer albedo than ice (0.85 for dry snow and 0.75 for dry ice in our
296 case); thus it protects the ice against melting in spring (after
297 January).
298
299 On the other hand, snow reduces the effective conductivity and thus the heat
300 flux through the ice. This insulating effect slows down the cooling of
301 the surface water underneath the ice and limits the ice growth from
302 below, so that less snow in the ice-growing season leads to more new
303 ice and thus more ice export.
304 \ml{PH: Should probably discuss the effect of snow vs. rain.
305 To me it seems that the "rain" effect doesn't really play a role
306 because the neg. sensitivities are too late in the fall,
307 probably mostly falling as snow.} \ml{[ML: correct, I looked at
308 NCEP/CORE air temperatures, and they are hardly above freezing in
309 Jul/Aug, but otherwise below freezing, that why I can assume that most
310 precip is snow. ]} \ml{[this is not very good but do you have anything
311 better?:]}
312 The negative sensitivities to precipitation between 95\degW\ and
313 85\degW\ in spring 1992 may be explained by a similar mechanism: in an
314 area of thick snow (almost 50\,cm), ice cannot melt and tends to block
315 the channel so that ice coming in from the West cannot pass thus
316 leading to less ice export in the next season.
317
318 \subsubsection{Forward sensitivities}
319
320 \ml{[Here we need for integrations to show that the adjoint
321 sensitivites are not just academic. I suggest to perturb HEFF
322 and THETA initial conditions, and PRECIP somewhere in the Melville
323 Sound and then produce plots similar to reffig{lancasteradj}. For
324 PRECIP it would be great to have two perturbation experiments, one
325 where ADJprecip is posivite and one where ADJprecip is negative]}
326
327
328 %(*)
329 %The sensitivity in Baffin Bay are more complex.
330 %The pattern evolves along the Western boundary, connecting
331 %the Lancaster Sound Polynya, the Coburg Island Polynya, and the
332 %North Water Polynya, and reaches into Nares Strait and the Kennedy Channel.
333 %The sign of sensitivities has an oscillatory character
334 %[AT FREQUENCY OF SEASONAL CYCLE?].
335 %First, we need to establish whether forward perturbation runs
336 %corroborate the oscillatory behaviour.
337 %Then, several possible explanations:
338 %(i) connection established through Nares Strait throughflow
339 %which extends into Western boundary current in Northern Baffin Bay.
340 %(ii) sea-ice concentration there is seasonal, i.e. partly
341 %ice-free during the year. Seasonal cycle in sensitivity likely
342 %connected to ice-free vs. ice-covered parts of the year.
343 %Negative sensitivities can potentially be attributed
344 %to blocking of Lancaster Sound ice export by Western boundary ice
345 %in Baffin Bay.
346 %(iii) Alternatively to (ii), flow reversal in Lancaster Sound is a possibility
347 %(in reality there's a Northern counter current hugging the coast of
348 %Devon Island which we probably don't resolve).
349
350 %Remote control of Kennedy Channel on Lancaster Sound ice export
351 %seems a nice test for appropriateness of free-slip vs. no-slip BCs.
352
353 %\paragraph{Sensitivities to the sea-ice area}
354
355 %Fig. XXX depcits transient sea-ice export sensitivities
356 %to changes in sea-ice concentration
357 % $\partial J / \partial area$ using free-slip
358 %(left column) and no-slip (right column) boundary conditions.
359 %Sensitivity snapshots are depicted for (from top to bottom)
360 %12, 24, 36, and 48 months prior to May 2003.
361 %Contrary to the steady patterns seen for thickness sensitivities,
362 %the ice-concentration sensitivities exhibit a strong seasonal cycle
363 %in large parts of the domain (but synchronized on large scale).
364 %The following discussion is w.r.t. free-slip run.
365
366 %(*)
367 %Months, during which sensitivities are negative:
368 %\\
369 %0 to 5 Db=N/A, Dr=5 (May-Jan) \\
370 %10 to 17 Db=7, Dr=5 (Jul-Jan) \\
371 %22 to 29 Db=7, Dr=5 (Jul-Jan) \\
372 %34 to 41 Db=7, Dr=5 (Jul-Jan) \\
373 %46 to 49 D=N/A \\
374 %%
375 %These negative sensitivities seem to be connected to months
376 %during which main parts of the CAA are essentially entirely ice-covered.
377 %This means that increase in ice concentration during this period
378 %will likely reduce ice export due to blocking
379 %[NEED TO EXPLAIN WHY THIS IS NOT THE CASE FOR dJ/dHEFF].
380 %Only during periods where substantial parts of the CAA are
381 %ice free (i.e. sea-ice concentration is less than one in larger parts of
382 %the CAA) will an increase in ice-concentration increase ice export.
383
384 %(*)
385 %Sensitivities peak about 2-3 months before sign reversal, i.e.
386 %max. negative sensitivities are expected end of July
387 %[DOUBLE CHECK THIS].
388
389 %(*)
390 %Peaks/bursts of sensitivities for months
391 %14-17, 19-21, 27-29, 30-33, 38-40, 42-45
392
393 %(*)
394 %Spatial "anti-correlation" (in sign) between main sensitivity branch
395 %(essentially Northwest Passage and immediate connecting channels),
396 %and remote places.
397 %For example: month 20, 28, 31.5, 40, 43.
398 %The timings of max. sensitivity extent are similar between
399 %free-slip and no-slip run; and patterns are similar within CAA,
400 %but differ in the Arctic Ocean interior.
401
402 %(*)
403 %Interesting (but real?) patterns in Arctic Ocean interior.
404
405 %\paragraph{Sensitivities to the sea-ice velocity}
406
407 %(*)
408 %Patterns of ADJuice at almost any point in time are rather complicated
409 %(in particular with respect to spatial structure of signs).
410 %Might warrant perturbation tests.
411 %Patterns of ADJvice, on the other hand, are more spatially coherent,
412 %but still hard to interpret (or even counter-intuitive
413 %in many places).
414
415 %(*)
416 %"Growth in extent of sensitivities" goes in clear pulses:
417 %almost no change between months: 0-5, 10-20, 24-32, 36-44
418 %These essentially correspond to months of
419
420
421 %\subsection{Sensitivities to the oceanic state}
422
423 %\paragraph{Sensitivities to theta}
424
425 %\textit{Sensitivities at the surface (z = 5 m)}
426
427 %(*)
428 %mabye redo with caxmax=0.02 or even 0.05
429
430 %(*)
431 %Core of negative sensitivities spreading through the CAA as
432 %one might expect [TEST]:
433 %Increase in SST will decrease ice thickness and therefore ice export.
434
435 %(*)
436 %What's maybe unexpected is patterns of positive sensitivities
437 %at the fringes of the "core", e.g. in the Southern channels
438 %(Bellot St., Peel Sound, M'Clintock Channel), and to the North
439 %(initially MacLean St., Prince Gustav Adolf Sea, Hazen St.,
440 %then shifting Northward into the Arctic interior).
441
442 %(*)
443 %Marked sensitivity from the Arctic interior roughly along 60$^{\circ}$W
444 %propagating into Lincoln Sea, then
445 %entering Nares Strait and Smith Sound, periodically
446 %warming or cooling[???] the Lancaster Sound exit.
447
448 %\textit{Sensitivities at depth (z = 200 m)}
449
450 %(*)
451 %Negative sensitivities almost everywhere, as might be expected.
452
453 %(*)
454 %Sensitivity patterns between free-slip and no-slip BCs
455 %are quite similar, except in Lincoln Sea (North of Nares St),
456 %where the sign is reversed (but pattern remains similar).
457
458 %\paragraph{Sensitivities to salt}
459
460 %T.B.D.
461
462 %\paragraph{Sensitivities to velocity}
463
464 %T.B.D.
465
466 %\subsection{Sensitivities to the atmospheric state}
467
468 %\begin{itemize}
469 %%
470 %\item
471 %plot of ATEMP for 12, 24, 36, 48 months
472 %%
473 %\item
474 %plot of HEFF for 12, 24, 36, 48 months
475 %%
476 %\end{itemize}
477
478
479
480 %\reffig{4yradjheff}(a--d) depict sensitivities of sea-ice export
481 %through Fram Strait in December 1995 to changes in sea-ice thickness
482 %12, 24, 36, 48 months back in time. Corresponding sensitivities to
483 %ocean surface temperature are depicted in
484 %\reffig{4yradjthetalev1}(a--d). The main characteristics is
485 %consistency with expected advection of sea-ice over the relevant time
486 %scales considered. The general positive pattern means that an
487 %increase in sea-ice thickness at location $(x,y)$ and time $t$ will
488 %increase sea-ice export through Fram Strait at time $T_e$. Largest
489 %distances from Fram Strait indicate fastest sea-ice advection over the
490 %time span considered. The ice thickness sensitivities are in close
491 %correspondence to ocean surface sentivitites, but of opposite sign.
492 %An increase in temperature will incur ice melting, decrease in ice
493 %thickness, and therefore decrease in sea-ice export at time $T_e$.
494
495 %The picture is fundamentally different and much more complex
496 %for sensitivities to ocean temperatures away from the surface.
497 %\reffig{4yradjthetalev10??}(a--d) depicts ice export sensitivities to
498 %temperatures at roughly 400 m depth.
499 %Primary features are the effect of the heat transport of the North
500 %Atlantic current which feeds into the West Spitsbergen current,
501 %the circulation around Svalbard, and ...
502
503
504 %%\begin{figure}[t!]
505 %%\centerline{
506 %%\subfigure[{\footnotesize -12 months}]
507 %%{\includegraphics*[width=0.44\linewidth]{\fpath/run_4yr_ADJheff_arc_lev1_tim072_cmax2.0E+02.eps}}
508 %%\includegraphics*[width=.3\textwidth]{H_c.bin_res_100_lev1.pdf}
509 %%
510 %%\subfigure[{\footnotesize -24 months}]
511 %%{\includegraphics*[width=0.44\linewidth]{\fpath/run_4yr_ADJheff_arc_lev1_tim145_cmax2.0E+02.eps}}
512 %%}
513 %%
514 %%\caption{Sensitivity of sea-ice export through Fram Strait in December 2005 to
515 %%sea-ice thickness at various prior times.
516 %%\label{fig:4yradjheff}}
517 %%\end{figure}
518
519
520 %\ml{[based on the movie series
521 % zzz\_run\_export\_canarch\_freeslip\_4yr\_1989\_ADJ*:]} The ice
522 %export through the Canadian Archipelag is highly sensitive to the
523 %previous state of the ocean-ice system in the Archipelago and the
524 %Western Arctic. According to the \ml{(adjoint)} senstivities of the
525 %eastward ice transport through Lancaster Sound (\reffig{arctic_topog},
526 %cross-section G) with respect to ice volume (effective thickness), ocean
527 %surface temperature, and vertical diffusivity near the surface
528 %(\reffig{fouryearadj}) after 4 years of integration the following
529 %mechanisms can be identified: near the ``observation'' (cross-section
530 %G), smaller vertical diffusivities lead to lower surface temperatures
531 %and hence to more ice that is available for export. Further away from
532 %cross-section G, the sensitivity to vertical diffusivity has the
533 %opposite sign, but temperature and ice volume sensitivities have the
534 %same sign as close to the observation.
535
536
537 %%% Local Variables:
538 %%% mode: latex
539 %%% TeX-master: "ceaice"
540 %%% End:

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