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: |