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And another one (Kwok, 2006)

1 heimbach 1.15 %---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2 dimitri 1.17 \section{MITgcm adjoint code generation}
3 heimbach 1.1 \label{sec:adjoint}
4 heimbach 1.15 %---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5 heimbach 1.1
6 heimbach 1.3 There is now a growing body of literature on adjoint applications
7     in oceanography and adjoint code generation via AD.
8     We therefore limit the description of the method to a brief summary.
9 heimbach 1.11 The adjoint model operator (ADM) is the transpose of the
10     Jacobian or tangent
11 heimbach 1.1 linear model operator (TLM) of the full (in general nonlinear) forward
12 dimitri 1.17 model, in this case, the MITgcm coupled ocean and sea ice model.
13 heimbach 1.11 The TLM computes directional derivatives for a given perturbation direction.
14     In contrast, for scalar-valued model diagnostics (cost function or
15     objective function), the ADM computes the the full gradient
16     of the cost function with respect to all model inputs
17 heimbach 1.3 (independent or control variables). These inputs can be two- or
18 heimbach 1.1 three-dimensional fields of initial conditions of the ocean or sea-ice
19     state, model parameters such as mixing coefficients, or time-varying
20     surface or lateral (open) boundary conditions. When combined, these
21 dimitri 1.17 variables span a potentially high-dimensional, e.g., O(10$^8$),
22 heimbach 1.6 control space. At this problem dimension, perturbing
23 dimitri 1.17 individual parameters to assess model sensitivities is
24 heimbach 1.1 prohibitive. By contrast, transient sensitivities of the objective
25     function to any element of the control and model state space can be
26     computed very efficiently in one single adjoint model integration,
27     provided an adjoint model is available.
28    
29 mlosch 1.9 The burden of developing ``by hand''
30 heimbach 1.3 an adjoint model in general matches that of
31     the forward model development. The substantial extra investment
32 dimitri 1.17 often prevents serious attempts at making available adjoint
33 heimbach 1.3 components of sophisticated models.
34     The alternative route of rigorous application of AD has proven
35     very successful in the context of MITgcm ocean modeling applications.
36     The model has been tailored to be readily used with AD
37     tools for adjoint code generation.
38     The adjoint model of the MITgcm has become an invaluable
39 dimitri 1.17 tool for sensitivity analysis as well as for state estimation \citep[for a
40 heimbach 1.3 recent overview and summary, see][]{heim:08}.
41 dimitri 1.17 AD also enables a large variety of configurations
42     and studies to be conducted with adjoint methods without the onerous task of
43     modifying the adjoint of each new configuration by hand.
44 heimbach 1.11 \cite{gier-kami:98} discuss in detail the advantages of the AD approach.
45 heimbach 1.3
46     The AD route was also taken in developing and adapting the sea-ice
47 dimitri 1.17 component of the MITgcm, so that tangent linear and adjoint components can be
48     obtained and kept up to date without excessive effort.
49     As for the TLM and ADM components of the MITgcm ocean model, we rely on the
50     automatic differentiation (AD) tool ``Transformation of Algorithms in
51 heimbach 1.1 Fortran'' (TAF) developed by Fastopt \citep{gier-kami:98} to generate
52 dimitri 1.17 TLM and ADM code of the MITgcm sea ice model \citep[for details
53     see][]{maro-etal:99,heim-etal:05}.
54     Note that for the ocean component, we are now also able to generate
55 heimbach 1.7 efficient derivative code using the new open-source tool OpenAD
56 heimbach 1.15 \citep{utke-etal:08}.
57 heimbach 1.7 Appendix \ref{app:adissues} provides details of
58 dimitri 1.17 adjoint code generation for the coupled ocean and sea ice MITgcm
59     configuration.
60 heimbach 1.1
61 dimitri 1.17 Since conducting this study, further changes to the
62     thermodynamic formulation have been implemented, which improve certain
63     aspects of forward and adjoint model behavior.
64     These changes are discussed in detail in \cite{fent:09} along with application
65     of the coupled ocean and sea ice MITgcm adjoint to estimating the state of the
66 dimitri 1.33 Labrador Sea during 1996--1997.
67 dimitri 1.17
68 heimbach 1.35 To conclude this section, we emphasize the coupled nature of the MITgcm ocean
69 dimitri 1.33 and sea ice adjoint.
70 dimitri 1.24 \reffigure{couplingschematic}
71 heimbach 1.21 illustrates how sensitivities of a
72 dimitri 1.17 sea ice export objective function,
73     which depends solely on the sea-ice state,
74     propagate both into the time-varying ocean state as well
75     as into the atmospheric boundary conditions.
76 heimbach 1.1
77 dimitri 1.33 \begin{figure}[t]
78     \newcommand{\textinfigure}[1]{{\normalsize\textbf{\textsf{#1}}}}
79     \newcommand{\mathinfigure}[1]{\normalsize\ensuremath{{#1}}}
80     \psfrag{delS}{\mathinfigure{\delta S}}
81     \psfrag{delT}{\mathinfigure{\delta \Theta}}
82     \psfrag{delc}{\mathinfigure{\delta c}}
83     \psfrag{delh}{\mathinfigure{\delta h}}
84     \psfrag{delAT}{\mathinfigure{\delta T_a}}
85     \psfrag{delP}{\mathinfigure{\delta p}}
86     \psfrag{delJ}{\mathinfigure{\delta J}}
87     %
88     \psfrag{addS}{\mathinfigure{\delta^{\ast} S}}
89     \psfrag{addT}{\mathinfigure{\delta^{\ast} \Theta}}
90     \psfrag{addc}{\mathinfigure{\delta^{\ast} c}}
91     \psfrag{addh}{\mathinfigure{\delta^{\ast} h}}
92     \psfrag{addAT}{\mathinfigure{\delta^{\ast} T_a}}
93     \psfrag{addP}{\mathinfigure{\delta^{\ast} p}}
94     \psfrag{addJ}{\mathinfigure{\delta^{\ast} J}}
95     \centerline{
96     \includegraphics*[width=.5\textwidth]{\fpath/coupling_schematic}
97     }
98     \caption{
99     This schematic diagram illustrates how, for a given sea ice cost function
100     $J$, the sensitivities spread through the coupled adjoint.
101     In the left column, a perturbation of some \textit{individual} variable,
102     e.g., an ocean temperature perturbation $\delta \Theta$ at a particular
103     location, changes the cost function by $\delta J$. In the right
104     column, the cost function sensitivity $\delta^{\ast} J$ is affected by
105     \textit{all} sensitivities ($\delta^{\ast} \Theta$, $\delta^{\ast} S$,
106     $\delta^{\ast} c$, $\delta^{\ast} h$, $\delta^{\ast}T_a$, $\delta^{\ast}
107     p$, etc.) of the coupled system.
108     \label{fig:couplingschematic}}
109     \end{figure}
110 heimbach 1.1
111 heimbach 1.15 %---------------------------------------------------------------------------
112 heimbach 1.6 \section{A case study: Sensitivities of sea-ice export through
113 heimbach 1.21 Lancaster Sound}
114 heimbach 1.15 %---------------------------------------------------------------------------
115 heimbach 1.1
116     We demonstrate the power of the adjoint method in the context of
117 heimbach 1.21 investigating sea-ice export sensitivities through Lancaster Sound.
118 dimitri 1.18 The rationale for this choice is to complement the analysis of sea-ice
119     dynamics in the presence of narrow straits of Part 1
120 dimitri 1.24 \cite[see also][]{los09}. Lancaster Sound is one of
121 dimitri 1.18 the main paths of sea ice export through the Canadian Arctic
122 heimbach 1.36 Archipelago (CAA)
123     \citep{mell:02,prin-hami:05,mich-etal:06,muen-etal:06,kwok:06}.
124     \reffigure{sverdrupbasin} %taken from \cite{mell:02}
125 dimitri 1.18 reflects the intricate local geography of CAA
126 heimbach 1.8 straits, sounds, and islands.
127     Export sensitivities reflect dominant pathways
128 dimitri 1.18 through the CAA, as resolved by the model. Sensitivity maps provide a very
129     detailed view of
130 mlosch 1.12 %shed a very detailed light on
131     various quantities affecting the sea-ice export
132 heimbach 1.14 (and thus the underlying propagation pathways).
133 dimitri 1.18 A caveat of the present study is the limited resolution, which
134 heimbach 1.11 is not adequate to realistically simulate the CAA.
135     For example, while the dominant
136 heimbach 1.1 circulation through Lancaster Sound is toward the East, there is a
137 heimbach 1.36 small Westward flow to the North, hugging the coast of Devon Island,
138     which is not resolved in our simulation.
139 heimbach 1.11 Nevertheless, the focus here is on elucidating model sensitivities in a
140     general way. For any given simulation, whether deemed
141 dimitri 1.18 ``realistic'' or not, the adjoint provides exact model sensitivities, which
142     help test whether hypothesized processes are actually
143 heimbach 1.11 borne out by the model dynamics.
144 dimitri 1.18 Note that the resolution used in this study is at least as good or better than
145     the resolution used for IPCC-type calculations.
146 heimbach 1.1
147 dimitri 1.33 \begin{figure}[t]
148     \centering
149     \includegraphics*[width=0.5\textwidth]{\fpath/map_part2}
150     % \includegraphics*[width=0.9\textwidth]{\fpath/map_sverdrup_basin_melling_2002}
151     \caption{Map of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago with model
152     coastlines and grid (filled grey boxes are land). The black
153     contours are the true coastlines as taken from the GSHHS data base
154     \citep{wessel96}.
155     \label{fig:sverdrupbasin}}
156     \end{figure}
157 heimbach 1.15
158     %---------------------------------------------------------------------------
159 heimbach 1.6 \subsection{The model configuration}
160 heimbach 1.15 %---------------------------------------------------------------------------
161 heimbach 1.6
162 heimbach 1.14 The model domain is similar to the one described in Part 1.
163 dimitri 1.24 It is carved out from the Arcitc face of a global, eddy-admitting,
164 dimitri 1.19 cubed-sphere simulation \citep{menemenlis05}
165     but with 36-km instead of 18-km grid cell width,
166     i.e., half the horizontal resolution of the configuration described in Part 1.
167 mlosch 1.12 %, now amounting to roughly 36 km..
168 dimitri 1.19 The adjoint model for this configuration runs efficiently on 80 processors,
169     inferred from benchmarks on both an SGI Altix and on an IBM SP5 at NASA/ARC
170     and at NCAR/CSL, respectively.
171     Following a 4-year spinup (1985 to 1988), the model is integrated for an
172     additional four
173     years and nine months between January 1, 1989 and September 30, 1993.
174     It is forced at the surface using realistic 6-hourly NCEP/NCAR atmospheric
175     state variables.
176 heimbach 1.1 %Over the open ocean these are
177     %converted into air-sea fluxes via the bulk formulae of
178     %\citet{large04}. The air-sea fluxes in the presence of
179     %sea-ice are handled by the ice model as described in \refsec{model}.
180 heimbach 1.29 The objective function $J$ is chosen as the ``solid'' freshwater
181     export through Lancaster Sound (LC), at approximately 74\degN, 82\degW\ in
182 dimitri 1.24 \reffig{sverdrupbasin}, integrated over the final 12-month period, i.e.,
183 dimitri 1.19 October 1, 1992 to September 30, 1993.
184     That is,
185 heimbach 1.29
186     \begin{linenomath*}
187 heimbach 1.1 \begin{equation}
188 mlosch 1.12 \label{eq:costls}
189 heimbach 1.29 J \, =
190     \frac{1}{\rho_{fresh}}
191     \int_{\mathrm{Oct\,92}}^{\mathrm{Sep\,93}}
192     \int_{\mathrm{LC}}
193     \, (\rho \, h \, c \, + \, \rho_{s} h_{s}c)\,u \,ds \,dt,
194 heimbach 1.1 \end{equation}
195 heimbach 1.29 \end{linenomath*}
196    
197     %\ml{[ML: shouldn't $J$ be normalized by $\rho_{\mathrm{fresh}}$ to
198     % give the units that we use in the figures?]}
199     is the export of ice and snow converted to units of freshwater, where $c$ is
200 dimitri 1.19 the fractional ice cover, $u$ is the along-channel ice drift
201 heimbach 1.21 velocity, $h$ and $h_s$ are the ice and snow
202 heimbach 1.29 thicknesses, and $\rho$, $\rho_s$, and $\rho_{fresh}$
203     are the ice, snow and freshwater densities, respectively.
204 heimbach 1.1 The forward trajectory of the model integration resembles broadly that
205 dimitri 1.19 of the model in Part~1 but some details are different due
206     to the different resolution and integration period.
207 heimbach 1.1 %
208 mlosch 1.9 %\ml{PH: Martin, please confirm/double-check following sentence:}
209 heimbach 1.8 %
210 mlosch 1.9 For example, the differences in solid
211 heimbach 1.14 freshwater export through Lancaster Sound are smaller
212 heimbach 1.8 between no-slip and
213 heimbach 1.21 free-slip lateral boundary conditions at higher resolution,
214     as shown in Part 1, Section 4.3
215 mlosch 1.9 ($91\pm85\text{\,km$^{3}$\,y$^{-1}$}$ and
216     $77\pm110\text{\,km$^{3}$\,y$^{-1}$}$ for free-slip and no-slip, respectively,
217 dimitri 1.19 and for the C-grid LSR solver) than at lower resolution
218 heimbach 1.8 ($116\pm101\text{\,km$^{3}$\,y$^{-1}$}$ and
219 mlosch 1.9 $39\pm64\text{\,km$^{3}$\,y$^{-1}$}$ for free-slip and no-slip, respectively).
220 dimitri 1.19 The large range of these estimates emphasizes the need to
221 mlosch 1.12 better understand the model sensitivities to lateral boundary
222 dimitri 1.19 conditions and to different configuration details. We aim to explore
223 mlosch 1.12 these sensitivities across the entire model state space in a
224 heimbach 1.14 comprehensive manner by means of the adjoint model.
225 mlosch 1.12 %The large discrepancy between all these numbers underlines the need to
226     %better understand the model sensitivities across the entire model state space
227     %resulting from different lateral boundary conditions and different
228     %configurations, and which we aim to explore in a more
229     %comprehensive manner through the adjoint.
230 heimbach 1.1
231 heimbach 1.6 The adjoint model is the transpose of the tangent linear model
232 dimitri 1.19 operator. It runs backwards in time from September 1993 to
233     January 1989. During this integration period, the Lagrange multipliers
234     of the model subject to objective function \refeq{costls} are
235     accumulated. These Langrange multipliers
236     are the sensitivities (or derivatives) of the objective function with respect
237 mlosch 1.9 %ML which can be interpreted as sensitivities of the objective function
238 dimitri 1.19 to each control variable and to each element of the intermediate
239     coupled ocean and sea ice model state variables.
240     Thus, all sensitivity elements of the model state and of the surface
241     atmospheric state are
242 heimbach 1.1 available for analysis of the transient sensitivity behavior. Over the
243 heimbach 1.14 open ocean, the adjoint of the \cite{larg-yeag:04} bulk formula scheme computes
244     sensitivities to the time-varying atmospheric state.
245     Specifically, ocean sensitivities propagate to air-sea flux sensitivities,
246     which are mapped to atmospheric state sensitivities via the
247     bulk formula adjoint.
248     Similarly, over ice-covered areas, the sea-ice model adjoint,
249     rather than the bulk formula adjoint converts surface ocean sensitivities to
250     atmospheric sensitivities.
251    
252 heimbach 1.1
253 heimbach 1.15 %---------------------------------------------------------------------------
254 heimbach 1.6 \subsection{Adjoint sensitivities}
255 heimbach 1.15 %---------------------------------------------------------------------------
256 heimbach 1.7
257 dimitri 1.33 \begin{figure*}[t]
258     \includegraphics*[width=\textwidth]{\fpath/adj_canarch_freeslip_ADJheff}
259     \caption{Sensitivity $\partial{J}/\partial{(hc)}$ in
260     m$^3$\,s$^{-1}$/m for four different times using free-slip
261     lateral sea ice boundary conditions. The color scale is chosen
262     to illustrate the patterns of the sensitivities.
263     \label{fig:adjhefffreeslip}}
264     \end{figure*}
265    
266     \begin{figure*}[t]
267     \includegraphics*[width=\textwidth]{\fpath/adj_canarch_noslip_ADJheff}
268     \caption{Same as in \reffig{adjhefffreeslip} but for no-slip
269     lateral sea ice boundary conditions.
270     \label{fig:adjheffnoslip}}
271     \end{figure*}
272    
273 heimbach 1.1 The most readily interpretable ice-export sensitivity is that to
274 mlosch 1.13 ice thickness, $\partial{J} / \partial{(hc)}$.
275 dimitri 1.24 Maps of transient sensitivities $\partial{J} / \partial{(hc)}$ are shown for
276     free-slip (\reffig{adjhefffreeslip}) and for no-slip
277     (\reffig{adjheffnoslip}) boundary conditions.
278 dimitri 1.25 Each figure depicts four sensitivity snapshots for the objective function $J$,
279     starting October 1, 1992, i.e., at the beginning of the 12-month averaging
280     period, and going back in time to October 2, 1989.
281     As a reminder, the full period over which the adjoint sensitivities
282     are calculated is between January 1, 1989 and September 30, 1993.
283 heimbach 1.1
284 mlosch 1.13 The sensitivity patterns for ice thickness are predominantly positive.
285 dimitri 1.24 An increase in ice volume in most places west, i.e., ``upstream'', of
286 mlosch 1.12 %``upstream'' of
287 heimbach 1.29 Lancaster Sound increases the solid freshwater export at the exit section.
288 heimbach 1.14 The transient nature of the sensitivity patterns is evident:
289     the area upstream of Lancaster Sound that
290 heimbach 1.1 contributes to the export sensitivity is larger in the earlier snapshot.
291 dimitri 1.33 In the free slip case, the sensivity follows (backwards in time) the dominant
292     pathway through Barrow Strait
293 heimbach 1.14 into Viscount Melville Sound, and from there trough M'Clure Strait
294     into the Arctic Ocean
295     %
296     \footnote{
297 heimbach 1.15 (the branch of the ``Northwest Passage'' apparently
298 heimbach 1.14 discovered by Robert McClure during his 1850 to 1854 expedition;
299     McClure lost his vessel in the Viscount Melville Sound)
300     }.
301     %
302     Secondary paths are northward from
303     Viscount Melville Sound through Byam Martin Channel into
304     Prince Gustav Adolf Sea and through Penny Strait into MacLean Strait.
305 heimbach 1.1
306 dimitri 1.25 There are large differences between the free-slip and no-slip
307     solutions. By the end of the adjoint integration in January 1989, the
308     no-slip sensitivities (\reffig{adjheffnoslip}) are generally weaker than the
309 heimbach 1.14 free slip sensitivities and hardly reach beyond the western end of
310 dimitri 1.33 Barrow Strait. In contrast, the free-slip sensitivities
311     (\reffig{adjhefffreeslip})
312 heimbach 1.1 extend through most of the CAA and into the Arctic interior, both to
313 dimitri 1.25 the West (M'Clure Strait) and to the North (Ballantyne Strait, Prince
314 heimbach 1.14 Gustav Adolf Sea, Massey Sound). In this case the ice can
315 dimitri 1.25 drift more easily through narrow straits and a positive ice
316 heimbach 1.1 volume anomaly anywhere upstream in the CAA increases ice export
317 dimitri 1.25 through Lancaster Sound within the simulated 4-year period.
318 heimbach 1.1
319 heimbach 1.2 One peculiar feature in the October 1992 sensitivity maps
320     are the negative sensivities to the East and, albeit much weaker,
321 dimitri 1.24 to the West of Lancaster Sound.
322 heimbach 1.14 The former can be explained by indirect effects: less ice eastward
323 dimitri 1.24 of Lancaster Sound results in
324 heimbach 1.2 less resistance to eastward drift and thus more export.
325     A similar mechanism might account for the latter,
326 heimbach 1.8 albeit more speculative: less ice to
327 dimitri 1.24 the West means that more ice can be moved eastward from Barrow Strait
328     into Lancaster Sound leading to more ice export.
329 heimbach 1.21 %\\ \ml{[ML: This
330     % paragraph is very weak, need to think of something else, longer
331     % fetch maybe? PH: Not sure what you mean. ML: I cannot remember,
332     % either, so maybe we should just leave it as is it, but the paragraph
333     % is weak, maybe we can drop it altogether and if reviewer comment on
334     % these negative sensitivies we put something back in?]}
335 heimbach 1.1
336 dimitri 1.33 \begin{figure*}
337     \centerline{
338     \includegraphics*[height=.8\textheight]{\fpath/lancaster_adj}
339     }
340     \caption{Hovmoeller diagrams along the axis of Viscount Melville
341     Sound, Barrow Strait, and Lancaster Sound. The diagrams show the
342     sensitivities (derivatives) of the ``solid'' freshwater, i.e.,
343     ice and snow, export $J$ through Lancaster Sound
344     (\reffig{sverdrupbasin}) with respect to
345     ice thickness ($hc$, top panels), ocean surface temperature (SST, middle panels), and
346     precipitation ($p$, bottom panels) for free slip (left panels) and no slip
347     (right panels) sea ice boundary conditions. For orientation, each plot is
348     overlaid with contours 1 and 3 of the normalized ice strength
349     $P/P^*=(hc)\,\exp[-C\,(1-c)]$.
350     \label{fig:lancasteradj}}
351     \end{figure*}
352    
353 heimbach 1.2 The temporal evolution of several ice export sensitivities
354     along a zonal axis through
355 heimbach 1.1 Lancaster Sound, Barrow Strait, and Melville Sound (115\degW\ to
356 dimitri 1.25 80\degW, averaged across the passages) are depicted in \reffig{lancasteradj}
357     as Hovmoeller diagrams, that is, two-dimensional maps of sensitivities as
358     function of longitude and time.
359     Serving as examples for the ocean, sea-ice, and atmospheric forcing components
360 mlosch 1.12 %In order to represent sensitivities to elements of the state of
361 dimitri 1.25 of the model, we depict, from top to bottom, the
362     sensitivities to ice thickness ($hc$), Sea Surface Temperature (SST), and
363     precipitation ($p$) for free slip
364 heimbach 1.1 (left column) and no slip (right column) ice drift boundary
365     conditions.
366    
367 dimitri 1.25 The Hovmoeller diagrams of ice thickness (top row) and SST
368 heimbach 1.1 (second row) sensitivities are coherent:
369 dimitri 1.24 more ice in Lancaster Sound leads
370 dimitri 1.25 to more export and one way to form more ice is by colder surface
371     temperatures. In the free-slip case the
372 mlosch 1.9 sensitivities spread out in ``pulses'' following a seasonal cycle:
373 heimbach 1.14 ice can propagate eastward (forward in time) and thus sensitivities
374     propagate westward (backwards in time) when the ice strength is low
375 heimbach 1.15 in late summer to early autumn
376 dimitri 1.24 (\reffig{lancasterfwd1}, bottom panels).
377 mlosch 1.12 In contrast, during winter, the sensitivities show little to no
378 dimitri 1.25 westward propagation as the ice is frozen solid and does not move.
379     In the no-slip case the (normalized)
380 heimbach 1.1 ice strength does not fall below 1 during the winters of 1991 to 1993
381     (mainly because the ice concentrations remain near 100\%, not
382     shown). Ice is therefore blocked and cannot drift eastwards
383     (forward in time) through the Viscount
384 dimitri 1.24 Melville Sound, Barrow Strait, and Lancaster Sound channel system.
385 heimbach 1.14 Consequently, the sensitivities do not propagate westward (backwards in
386 heimbach 1.1 time) and the export through Lancaster Sound is only affected by
387     local ice formation and melting for the entire integration period.
388    
389 dimitri 1.33 \begin{figure*}
390     \centerline{
391     \includegraphics*[height=.8\textheight]{\fpath/lancaster_fwd_1}
392     }
393     \caption{Hovmoeller diagrams along the axis of Viscount Melville
394     Sound, Barrow Strait, and Lancaster Sound. The diagrams show ice
395     thickness ($hc$, top panels), snow thickness ($h_{s}c$, middle panels) and
396     normalized ice strength ($P/P^*=(hc)\,\exp[-C\,(1-c)]$, bottom panels) for
397     free slip (left panels) and no slip (right panels) sea ice boundary
398     conditions. For orientation, each plot is overlaid with contours 1 and 3
399     of the normalized ice strength.
400     \label{fig:lancasterfwd1}}
401     \end{figure*}
402    
403 heimbach 1.14 It is worth contrasting the sensitivity
404 dimitri 1.25 diagrams of \reffig{lancasteradj}
405     with the Hovmoeller diagrams of the corresponding state variables
406     (Figs.~\ref{fig:lancasterfwd1} and \ref{fig:lancasterfwd2}).
407     The sensitivities show clear causal connections of ice motion
408     over the years, that is, they expose the winter arrest and the summer
409     evolution of the ice. These causal connections cannot
410     easily be inferred from the Hovmoeller diagrams of ice and snow
411     thickness. This example illustrates the usefulness and complementary nature
412     of the adjoint variables for investigating dynamical linkages in the
413 heimbach 1.14 ocean/sea-ice system.
414 mlosch 1.12
415 dimitri 1.33 \begin{figure*}
416     \centerline{
417     \includegraphics*[height=.8\textheight]{\fpath/lancaster_fwd_2}
418     }
419     \caption{Same as in \reffig{lancasterfwd1} but for SST (top panels), SSS
420     (middle panels), and precipitation (bottom panels).
421     \label{fig:lancasterfwd2}}
422     \end{figure*}
423 heimbach 1.14
424     The sensitivities to precipitation are more complex.
425 mlosch 1.12 %exhibit a more complex behaviour.
426 heimbach 1.14 To first order, they have an oscillatory pattern
427 mlosch 1.12 with negative sensitivity (more precipitation leads to less export)
428 heimbach 1.15 between roughly September and December and mostly positive sensitivity
429 dimitri 1.25 from January through June (sensitivities are negligible during the summer).
430 mlosch 1.12 %A fairly accurate description would note an oscillatory behaviour:
431     %they are negative (more precipitation leads to less export)
432     %before January (more precisely, between roughly August and December)
433     %and mostly positive after January
434     %(more precisely, January through July).
435 heimbach 1.1 Times of positive sensitivities coincide with times of
436 mlosch 1.12 normalized ice strengths exceeding values of~3.
437 heimbach 1.14 This pattern is broken only immediatly preceding the evaluation
438 dimitri 1.25 period of the ice export cost function in 1992. In contrast to previous
439     years, the sensitivity is negative between January and August~1992
440     and east of 95\degW.
441 heimbach 1.14
442     We shall elucidate the mechanisms underlying
443     these precipitation sensitivities
444     in Section \ref{sec:oscillprecip}
445     in the context of forward perturbation experiments.
446 heimbach 1.1
447    
448 heimbach 1.15 %---------------------------------------------------------------------------
449 heimbach 1.8 \subsection{Forward perturbation experiments}
450 mlosch 1.13 \label{sec:forwardpert}
451 heimbach 1.15 %---------------------------------------------------------------------------
452 heimbach 1.1
453 dimitri 1.26 Applying an automatically generated adjoint model
454 mlosch 1.12 %Using an adjoint model obtained via automatic differentiation
455     %and applied
456 dimitri 1.26 under potentially highly nonlinear conditions
457     %, and one generated automatically, relying on AD tools
458     incites the question
459 heimbach 1.14 to what extent the adjoint sensitivities are ``reliable''
460     in the sense of accurately representing forward model sensitivities.
461 mlosch 1.12 Adjoint sensitivities that are physically interpretable provide
462     %Obtaining adjoint fields that are physically interpretable provides
463 dimitri 1.26 a partial answer but an independent, quantitative test is needed to
464 heimbach 1.14 gain confidence in the calculations.
465 mlosch 1.12 %credence to the calculations.
466 dimitri 1.26 Such a verification can be achieved by comparing adjoint-derived gradients
467     with ones obtained from finite-difference perturbation experiments.
468     Specifically, for a control variable $\mathbf{u}$ of interest,
469     we can readily calculate an expected change $\delta J$ in the objective
470     function for an applied perturbation $\mathbf{\delta u}$ over domain $A$
471     based on adjoint sensitivities $\partial J / \partial \mathbf{u}$:
472 heimbach 1.29
473     \begin{linenomath*}
474 heimbach 1.3 \begin{equation}
475     \delta J \, = \, \int_A \frac{\partial J}{\partial \mathbf{u}} \,
476     \mathbf{\delta u} \, dA
477     \label{eqn:adjpert}
478     \end{equation}
479 heimbach 1.29 \end{linenomath*}
480    
481 dimitri 1.26 Alternatively we can infer the magnitude of the cost perturbation $\delta J$
482     without use of the adjoint. Instead we apply the same perturbation
483     $\mathbf{\delta u}$ to the control space over the same domain $A$ and
484     integrate the forward model. The perturbed cost is
485 heimbach 1.29
486     \begin{linenomath*}
487 heimbach 1.3 \begin{equation}
488     \delta J \, = \,
489 dimitri 1.26 J(\mathbf{u}+\mathbf{\delta u}) - J(\mathbf{u}).
490 heimbach 1.3 \label{eqn:fdpert}
491     \end{equation}
492 heimbach 1.29 \end{linenomath*}
493    
494 dimitri 1.26 The degree to which Eqns.~(\ref{eqn:adjpert}) and (\ref{eqn:fdpert}) agree
495 dimitri 1.28 depends both on the magnitude of perturbation $\mathbf{\delta u}$
496 dimitri 1.26 and on the length of the integration period.
497     %(note that forward and adjoint models are evaluated over the same period).
498    
499     We distinguish two types of adjoint-model tests. First there are finite
500     difference tests performed over short time intervals,
501     over which the assumption of linearity is expected to hold,
502     and where individual elements of the control vector are perturbed.
503 dimitri 1.27 We refer to these tests as gradient checks. Gradient checks are performed
504 dimitri 1.26 on a routine, automated basis for various MITgcm verification setups,
505 dimitri 1.27 including verification setups that exercise coupled ocean and sea ice model
506     configurations. These automated tests insure that updates to the MITgcm
507     repository do not break the differentiability of the code.
508    
509 dimitri 1.33 \begin{table*}
510     \caption{Summary of forward perturbation experiments
511     and comparison of adjoint-based and finite-difference-based cost function
512     sensitivities. All perturbations were applied to a region centered at
513     101.24$^{\circ}$W, 75.76$^{\circ}$N. The reference value for ice and snow
514     export through Lancaster Sound is $J_0$ = 69.6 km$^3/yr$.
515     }
516     \label{tab:pertexp}
517     \centering
518     \begin{tabular}{ccc@{\hspace{2ex}}c@{\hspace{2ex}}cr@{\hspace{2ex}}r@{\hspace{2ex}}r}
519     \hline
520     \textsf{exp.} & variable & time & $\Delta t$ & $\mathbf{\delta u}$ &
521     $\frac{\delta J(adj.)}{km^3/yr}$ & $\frac{\delta J(fwd.)}{km^3/yr}$ &
522     \% diff. \\
523     \hline \hline
524     \textsf{ICE1} & $hc$ & 1-Jan-89 & init. & 0.5 m & 0.98 & 1.1 & 11 \\
525     \textsf{OCE1} & SST & 1-Jan-89 & init. & 0.5$^{\circ}$C & -0.125 & -0.108 & 16 \\
526     \textsf{ATM1} & $p$ & 1-Apr-91 & 10 dy & 1.6$\cdot10^{-7}$ m/s & 0.185 & 0.191 & 3 \\
527     \textsf{ATM2} & $p$ & 1-Nov-91 & 10 dy & 1.6$\cdot10^{-7}$ m/s & -0.435 & -1.016 & 57 \\
528     \textsf{ATM3} & $p$ & 1-Apr-91 & 10 dy & -1.6$\cdot10^{-7}$ m/s & -0.185 & -0.071 & 62 \\
529     \textsf{ATM4} & $p$ & 1-Nov-91 & 10 dy & -1.6$\cdot10^{-7}$ m/s & 0.435 & 0.259 & 40 \\
530     \hline
531     \end{tabular}
532     \end{table*}
533    
534 dimitri 1.28 A second type of adjoint-model tests is
535     finite difference tests performed over longer time intervals
536     % comparable to the ones used for actual sensitivity studies such as this one,
537     and where a whole area is perturbed, guided by the adjoint sensitivity maps,
538 heimbach 1.15 in order to investigate physical mechanisms.
539 dimitri 1.28 The examples discussed herein and summarized in Table \ref{tab:pertexp}
540     are of this second type of sensitivity experiments.
541     For nonlinear models, the deviations between Eqns.~(\ref{eqn:adjpert}) and
542     (\ref{eqn:fdpert}) are expected to increase both with
543 heimbach 1.3 perturbation magnitude as well as with integration time.
544    
545 dimitri 1.33 \begin{figure}
546     %\centerline{
547     \subfigure %[$hc$]
548     {\includegraphics*[width=.49\textwidth]{\fpath/lanc_pert_heff}}
549    
550     \subfigure %[SST]
551     {\includegraphics*[width=.49\textwidth]{\fpath/lanc_pert_theta}}
552    
553     \subfigure %[$p$]
554     {\includegraphics*[width=.49\textwidth]{\fpath/lanc_pert_precip}}
555     %}
556     \caption{
557     Difference in solid freshwater export at 82$^{\circ}$W between perturbed
558     and unperturbed forward integrations. From top to bottom, perturbations
559     are initial ice thickness (\textsf{ICE1} in Table \ref{tab:pertexp}),
560     initial sea-surface temperature (\textsf{OCE1}), and precipitation
561     (\textsf{ATM1} and \textsf{ATM2}).
562     \label{fig:lancpert}}
563     \end{figure}
564    
565 dimitri 1.26 Comparison between finite-difference and adjoint-derived ice-export
566 dimitri 1.28 perturbations show remarkable agreement for initial value perturbations of
567     ice thickness (\textsf{ICE1}) or sea surface temperature (\textsf{OCE1}).
568     Deviations between perturbed cost function values remain below 16\% (see Table
569     \ref{tab:pertexp}).
570 dimitri 1.24 \reffigure{lancpert} depicts the temporal evolution of
571 dimitri 1.26 perturbed minus unperturbed ice export through Lancaster Sound for initial ice
572     thickness
573 dimitri 1.28 (top panel) and SST (middle panel) perturbations.
574     In both cases, differences are confined to the melting season, during which
575 heimbach 1.14 the ice unlocks and which %gets ``unstuck'' and
576 mlosch 1.12 can lead to significant export.
577 dimitri 1.28 As ``predicted'' by the adjoint, the two curves are of opposite sign
578 heimbach 1.8 and scales differ by almost an order of magnitude.
579    
580 heimbach 1.15 %---------------------------------------------------------------------------
581     \subsection{Oscillatory behavior of precipitation sensitivities}
582     \label{sec:oscillprecip}
583     %---------------------------------------------------------------------------
584 heimbach 1.14
585 dimitri 1.28 Our next goal is to explain the sign and magnitude changes through time
586     of the transient precipitation sensitivities.
587     To investigate this, we have carried out the following two perturbation
588     experiments: (i) an experiment labeled \textsf{ATM1}, in which we perturb
589     precipitation over a 10-day period between April 1 and 10, 1991, coincident
590     with a period of positive adjoint sensitivities, and (ii) an experiment
591     labeled \textsf{ATM2}, in which we apply the same perturbation over a 10-day
592     period between November 1 and 10, 1991, coincident with a period of negative
593     adjoint sensitivities.
594 dimitri 1.26 The perturbation magnitude chosen is
595 dimitri 1.30 $\mathbf{\delta u} = 1.6 \times 10^{-7}$ m/s, which is
596     of comparable magnitude with the standard deviation of precipitation.
597     %as a measure of spatial mean standard deviation of precipitation
598     %variability. The results are as follows: First
599     The perturbation experiments confirm the sign change
600 heimbach 1.8 when perturbing in different seasons.
601 dimitri 1.30 We observe good quantitative agreement for the April 1991 case
602     and a 50\% deviation for the November 1991 case.
603 heimbach 1.8 %
604 dimitri 1.31 The discrepancy between the finite-difference and adjoint-based sensitivity
605     estimates results from model nonlinearities and from the multi-year
606     integration period.
607     To support this statement, we repeated perturbation experiments \textsf{ATM1}
608     and \textsf{ATM2} but applied a perturbation with opposite sign, i.e.,
609     $\mathbf{\delta u} = -1.6 \times 10^{-7}$ m/s (experiments \textsf{ATM3} and
610     \textsf{ATM4} in Table \ref{tab:pertexp}).
611     For negative $\mathbf{\delta u}$, both perturbation periods lead to about
612 dimitri 1.30 50\% discrepancies between finite-difference and adjoint-derived
613 dimitri 1.31 ice export sensitivities.
614 mlosch 1.12 %
615 dimitri 1.31 The finite-difference export changes are different in amplitude for positive
616     and for negative perturbations, confirming that model nonlinearities impact
617     these calculations.
618    
619     These experiments constitute severe tests of the adjoint model in the sense
620     that they push the limit of the linearity assumption. Nevertheless, the
621     results confirm that adjoint sensitivities provide useful qualitative, and
622     within certain limits quantitative,
623     information of comprehensive model sensitivities that
624     cannot realistically be computed otherwise.
625 heimbach 1.3
626 heimbach 1.15 \begin{figure*}
627     \centerline{
628     \includegraphics*[width=.9\textwidth]{\fpath/lancaster_pert_hov}
629     }
630     \caption{
631 dimitri 1.33 Same as in \reffig{lancasterfwd1} but restricted to the period
632     1991--1993 and for the differences
633 heimbach 1.21 between (from top to bottom)
634 dimitri 1.33 ice thickness $(hc)$, snow thickness $(h_\mathrm{snow}c)$, and sea-surface
635     temperature (SST),
636     before and after a perturbation in precipitation of
637     $1.6\times10^{-1}\text{\,m\,s$^{-1}$}$ on November 1, 1991 (left panels)
638     and on April 1, 1991 (right panels). For orientation, each plot is
639     overlaid with contours 1 and 3 of the normalized ice strength
640     $P/P^*=(hc)\,\exp[-C\,(1-c)]$.
641 heimbach 1.15 \label{fig:lancasterperthov}}
642     \end{figure*}
643 heimbach 1.14
644 dimitri 1.31 To investigate in more detail the oscillatory behavior of precipitation
645     sensitivities
646 heimbach 1.14 we have plotted differences in ice thickness, snow thicknesses, and SST,
647     between perturbed and unperturbed simulations
648     along the Lancaster Sound axis as a function of time.
649 dimitri 1.24 \reffigure{lancasterperthov} shows how the
650 dimitri 1.31 small localized perturbations of precipitation are propagated,
651 heimbach 1.14 depending on whether applied during \textit{early} winter (left column)
652     or \textit{late} winter (right column).
653 mlosch 1.20 More precipation
654 heimbach 1.21 leads to more snow on the ice in all cases.
655     However, the same perturbation in different
656 heimbach 1.29 seasons has an opposite effect on the solid freshwater export
657 heimbach 1.21 through Lancaster Sound.
658 dimitri 1.31 Both the adjoint and the perturbation results suggest the following
659 heimbach 1.14 mechanism to be at play:
660 mlosch 1.20 %ML: why not let LaTeX do it? Elsevier might have it's own layout
661     \begin{itemize}
662     \item
663 heimbach 1.14 More snow in November (on thin ice) insulates the ice by reducing
664     the effective conductivity and thus the heat flux through the ice.
665     This insulating effect slows down the cooling of the surface water
666     underneath the ice. In summary, more snow early in the winter limits the ice growth
667     from above and below (negative sensitivity).
668 mlosch 1.20 \item
669 heimbach 1.14 More snow in April (on thick ice) insulates the
670     ice against melting.
671 dimitri 1.34 Shortwave radiation cannot penetrate the snow cover and snow has
672 heimbach 1.14 a higher albedo than ice (0.85 for dry snow and 0.75 for dry ice in our
673 dimitri 1.31 simulations); thus it protects the ice against melting in the spring,
674     more specifically, after January, and it leads to more ice in the
675 heimbach 1.14 following growing season.
676 mlosch 1.20 \end{itemize}
677     % \\ $\bullet$
678     % More snow in November (on thin ice) insulates the ice by reducing
679     % the effective conductivity and thus the heat flux through the ice.
680     % This insulating effect slows down the cooling of the surface water
681     % underneath the ice. In summary, more snow early in the winter limits the ice growth
682     % from above and below (negative sensitivity).
683     % \\ $\bullet$
684     % More snow in April (on thick ice) insulates the
685     % ice against melting.
686     % Short wave radiation cannot penetrate the snow cover and has
687     % a higher albedo than ice (0.85 for dry snow and 0.75 for dry ice in our
688     % case); thus it protects the ice against melting in spring
689     % (more specifically, after January), and leads to more ice in the
690     % following growing season.
691 heimbach 1.14
692 dimitri 1.31 A secondary effect is the
693     accumulation of snow, which increases the exported volume.
694     The feedback from SST appears to be negligible because
695 heimbach 1.14 there is little connection of anomalies beyond a full seasonal cycle.
696    
697 dimitri 1.31 We note that the effect of snow vs rain seems to be irrelevant
698     in explaining positive vs negative sensitivity patterns.
699     In the current implementation, the model differentiates between
700     snow and rain depending on the thermodynamic growth rate of sea ice; when it
701     is cold enough for ice to grow, all precipitation is assumed to be
702 heimbach 1.14 snow. The surface atmospheric conditions most of the year in the Lancaster
703 dimitri 1.31 Sound region are such that almost all precipitation is treated as snow,
704     except for a short period in July and August; even then, air
705 heimbach 1.14 temperatures are only slightly above freezing.
706    
707     Finally, the negative sensitivities to precipitation between 95\degW\ and
708 dimitri 1.31 85\degW\ during the spring of 1992, which break the oscillatory pattern,
709 heimbach 1.15 may also be explained by the presence of
710     snow: in an area of large snow accumulation
711 dimitri 1.31 (almost 50\,cm: see \reffig{lancasterfwd1}, middle panel),
712     ice cannot melt and it
713 heimbach 1.14 tends to block the channel so that ice coming from the West cannot
714 dimitri 1.31 pass, thus leading to less ice export in the next season.
715 heimbach 1.14 %
716     %\ml{PH: Why is this true for 1992 but not 1991?}
717 dimitri 1.31 The reason why this is true for the spring of 1992 but not for the spring of
718     1991 is that by then the high
719 heimbach 1.14 sensitivites have propagated westward out of the area of thick
720     snow and ice around 90\degW.
721 mlosch 1.13
722 heimbach 1.1 %(*)
723     %The sensitivity in Baffin Bay are more complex.
724     %The pattern evolves along the Western boundary, connecting
725     %the Lancaster Sound Polynya, the Coburg Island Polynya, and the
726     %North Water Polynya, and reaches into Nares Strait and the Kennedy Channel.
727     %The sign of sensitivities has an oscillatory character
728     %[AT FREQUENCY OF SEASONAL CYCLE?].
729     %First, we need to establish whether forward perturbation runs
730     %corroborate the oscillatory behaviour.
731     %Then, several possible explanations:
732     %(i) connection established through Nares Strait throughflow
733     %which extends into Western boundary current in Northern Baffin Bay.
734     %(ii) sea-ice concentration there is seasonal, i.e. partly
735     %ice-free during the year. Seasonal cycle in sensitivity likely
736 dimitri 1.31 %connected to ice-free vs ice-covered parts of the year.
737 heimbach 1.1 %Negative sensitivities can potentially be attributed
738     %to blocking of Lancaster Sound ice export by Western boundary ice
739     %in Baffin Bay.
740     %(iii) Alternatively to (ii), flow reversal in Lancaster Sound is a possibility
741     %(in reality there's a Northern counter current hugging the coast of
742     %Devon Island which we probably don't resolve).
743    
744     %Remote control of Kennedy Channel on Lancaster Sound ice export
745 dimitri 1.31 %seems a nice test for appropriateness of free-slip vs no-slip BCs.
746 heimbach 1.1
747     %\paragraph{Sensitivities to the sea-ice area}
748    
749 dimitri 1.24 %\refigure{XXX} depicts transient sea-ice export sensitivities
750 heimbach 1.1 %to changes in sea-ice concentration
751     % $\partial J / \partial area$ using free-slip
752     %(left column) and no-slip (right column) boundary conditions.
753     %Sensitivity snapshots are depicted for (from top to bottom)
754     %12, 24, 36, and 48 months prior to May 2003.
755     %Contrary to the steady patterns seen for thickness sensitivities,
756     %the ice-concentration sensitivities exhibit a strong seasonal cycle
757     %in large parts of the domain (but synchronized on large scale).
758     %The following discussion is w.r.t. free-slip run.
759    
760     %(*)
761     %Months, during which sensitivities are negative:
762     %\\
763     %0 to 5 Db=N/A, Dr=5 (May-Jan) \\
764     %10 to 17 Db=7, Dr=5 (Jul-Jan) \\
765     %22 to 29 Db=7, Dr=5 (Jul-Jan) \\
766     %34 to 41 Db=7, Dr=5 (Jul-Jan) \\
767     %46 to 49 D=N/A \\
768     %%
769     %These negative sensitivities seem to be connected to months
770     %during which main parts of the CAA are essentially entirely ice-covered.
771     %This means that increase in ice concentration during this period
772     %will likely reduce ice export due to blocking
773     %[NEED TO EXPLAIN WHY THIS IS NOT THE CASE FOR dJ/dHEFF].
774     %Only during periods where substantial parts of the CAA are
775     %ice free (i.e. sea-ice concentration is less than one in larger parts of
776     %the CAA) will an increase in ice-concentration increase ice export.
777    
778     %(*)
779     %Sensitivities peak about 2-3 months before sign reversal, i.e.
780     %max. negative sensitivities are expected end of July
781     %[DOUBLE CHECK THIS].
782    
783     %(*)
784     %Peaks/bursts of sensitivities for months
785     %14-17, 19-21, 27-29, 30-33, 38-40, 42-45
786    
787     %(*)
788 mlosch 1.9 %Spatial ``anti-correlation'' (in sign) between main sensitivity branch
789 heimbach 1.1 %(essentially Northwest Passage and immediate connecting channels),
790     %and remote places.
791     %For example: month 20, 28, 31.5, 40, 43.
792     %The timings of max. sensitivity extent are similar between
793     %free-slip and no-slip run; and patterns are similar within CAA,
794     %but differ in the Arctic Ocean interior.
795    
796     %(*)
797     %Interesting (but real?) patterns in Arctic Ocean interior.
798    
799     %\paragraph{Sensitivities to the sea-ice velocity}
800    
801     %(*)
802     %Patterns of ADJuice at almost any point in time are rather complicated
803     %(in particular with respect to spatial structure of signs).
804     %Might warrant perturbation tests.
805     %Patterns of ADJvice, on the other hand, are more spatially coherent,
806     %but still hard to interpret (or even counter-intuitive
807     %in many places).
808    
809     %(*)
810 mlosch 1.9 %``Growth in extent of sensitivities'' goes in clear pulses:
811 heimbach 1.1 %almost no change between months: 0-5, 10-20, 24-32, 36-44
812     %These essentially correspond to months of
813    
814    
815     %\subsection{Sensitivities to the oceanic state}
816    
817     %\paragraph{Sensitivities to theta}
818    
819     %\textit{Sensitivities at the surface (z = 5 m)}
820    
821     %(*)
822     %mabye redo with caxmax=0.02 or even 0.05
823    
824     %(*)
825     %Core of negative sensitivities spreading through the CAA as
826     %one might expect [TEST]:
827     %Increase in SST will decrease ice thickness and therefore ice export.
828    
829     %(*)
830     %What's maybe unexpected is patterns of positive sensitivities
831 mlosch 1.9 %at the fringes of the ``core'', e.g. in the Southern channels
832 heimbach 1.1 %(Bellot St., Peel Sound, M'Clintock Channel), and to the North
833     %(initially MacLean St., Prince Gustav Adolf Sea, Hazen St.,
834     %then shifting Northward into the Arctic interior).
835    
836     %(*)
837     %Marked sensitivity from the Arctic interior roughly along 60$^{\circ}$W
838     %propagating into Lincoln Sea, then
839     %entering Nares Strait and Smith Sound, periodically
840     %warming or cooling[???] the Lancaster Sound exit.
841    
842     %\textit{Sensitivities at depth (z = 200 m)}
843    
844     %(*)
845     %Negative sensitivities almost everywhere, as might be expected.
846    
847     %(*)
848     %Sensitivity patterns between free-slip and no-slip BCs
849     %are quite similar, except in Lincoln Sea (North of Nares St),
850     %where the sign is reversed (but pattern remains similar).
851    
852     %\paragraph{Sensitivities to salt}
853    
854     %T.B.D.
855    
856     %\paragraph{Sensitivities to velocity}
857    
858     %T.B.D.
859    
860     %\subsection{Sensitivities to the atmospheric state}
861    
862     %\begin{itemize}
863     %%
864     %\item
865     %plot of ATEMP for 12, 24, 36, 48 months
866     %%
867     %\item
868     %plot of HEFF for 12, 24, 36, 48 months
869     %%
870     %\end{itemize}
871    
872    
873    
874 dimitri 1.25 %\reffigure{4yradjheff}(a--d) depict sensitivities of sea-ice export
875 heimbach 1.1 %through Fram Strait in December 1995 to changes in sea-ice thickness
876     %12, 24, 36, 48 months back in time. Corresponding sensitivities to
877     %ocean surface temperature are depicted in
878     %\reffig{4yradjthetalev1}(a--d). The main characteristics is
879     %consistency with expected advection of sea-ice over the relevant time
880     %scales considered. The general positive pattern means that an
881     %increase in sea-ice thickness at location $(x,y)$ and time $t$ will
882     %increase sea-ice export through Fram Strait at time $T_e$. Largest
883     %distances from Fram Strait indicate fastest sea-ice advection over the
884     %time span considered. The ice thickness sensitivities are in close
885     %correspondence to ocean surface sentivitites, but of opposite sign.
886     %An increase in temperature will incur ice melting, decrease in ice
887     %thickness, and therefore decrease in sea-ice export at time $T_e$.
888    
889     %The picture is fundamentally different and much more complex
890     %for sensitivities to ocean temperatures away from the surface.
891 dimitri 1.25 %\reffigure{4yradjthetalev10??}(a--d) depicts ice export sensitivities to
892 heimbach 1.1 %temperatures at roughly 400 m depth.
893     %Primary features are the effect of the heat transport of the North
894     %Atlantic current which feeds into the West Spitsbergen current,
895     %the circulation around Svalbard, and ...
896    
897    
898     %%\begin{figure}[t!]
899     %%\centerline{
900     %%\subfigure[{\footnotesize -12 months}]
901     %%{\includegraphics*[width=0.44\linewidth]{\fpath/run_4yr_ADJheff_arc_lev1_tim072_cmax2.0E+02.eps}}
902     %%\includegraphics*[width=.3\textwidth]{H_c.bin_res_100_lev1.pdf}
903     %%
904     %%\subfigure[{\footnotesize -24 months}]
905     %%{\includegraphics*[width=0.44\linewidth]{\fpath/run_4yr_ADJheff_arc_lev1_tim145_cmax2.0E+02.eps}}
906     %%}
907     %%
908     %%\caption{Sensitivity of sea-ice export through Fram Strait in December 2005 to
909     %%sea-ice thickness at various prior times.
910     %%\label{fig:4yradjheff}}
911     %%\end{figure}
912    
913    
914     %\ml{[based on the movie series
915     % zzz\_run\_export\_canarch\_freeslip\_4yr\_1989\_ADJ*:]} The ice
916     %export through the Canadian Archipelag is highly sensitive to the
917     %previous state of the ocean-ice system in the Archipelago and the
918     %Western Arctic. According to the \ml{(adjoint)} senstivities of the
919 dimitri 1.19 %eastward ice transport through Lancaster Sound (\reffig{sverdrupbasin})
920     %with respect to ice volume (thickness), ocean
921 heimbach 1.1 %surface temperature, and vertical diffusivity near the surface
922     %(\reffig{fouryearadj}) after 4 years of integration the following
923     %mechanisms can be identified: near the ``observation'' (cross-section
924     %G), smaller vertical diffusivities lead to lower surface temperatures
925     %and hence to more ice that is available for export. Further away from
926     %cross-section G, the sensitivity to vertical diffusivity has the
927     %opposite sign, but temperature and ice volume sensitivities have the
928     %same sign as close to the observation.
929    
930    
931 mlosch 1.9
932 heimbach 1.1 %%% Local Variables:
933     %%% mode: latex
934 mlosch 1.9 %%% TeX-master: "ceaice_part2"
935 heimbach 1.1 %%% End:

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