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\section{Discussion and conclusion} |
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\label{sec:concl} |
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In this study we have presented an extension of the MITgcm adjoint |
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modeling capabilities to the coupled ocean/sea-ice system. |
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At the heart is the development of a dynamic/thermodynamic sea-ice model |
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akin to most state-of-the-art models that is amenable to efficient, |
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exact, parallel adjoint code generation via automatic differentiation. |
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At least two natural lines of applications are envisaged. |
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(i) Use of the coupled adjoint modeling capabilities for comprehensive |
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sensitivity calculations of the ocean/sea-ice system at high |
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Northern and Southern latitudes; |
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(ii) Extension of the ECCO state estimation infrastructure to derive |
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estimates that are constrained both in terms of available ocean |
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and sea-ice observations. |
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The power of the adjoint method was demonstrated through a multi-year |
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sensitivity calculation of solid freshwater (sea-ice and snow) |
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export through Lancaster Sound in the Canadian Arctic |
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Archipelago (CAA). The region was chosen in part to complement the |
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study of details in the numerical treatment of dynamics |
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presented in Part 1, and their effect the sea-ice drift and rheology |
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through narrow straits. |
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The transient adjoint sensitivities reveal dominant pathways |
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of sea-ice propagation through the CAA. They clearly expose |
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causal relationships between ice export and various state variables |
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of the coupled system back in time. |
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Determining such relationship through pure forward calculations |
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would be considerably more difficult to achieve. |
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The sensitivity pattern (and thus causal relationships) differ substantially, |
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depending on which lateral ice drift boundary condition |
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(free-slip vs. no-slip) is being used. |
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Analyzing adjoint sensitivities of the coupled ocean/sea-ice state |
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may thus help in determining which of |
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the lateral boundary conditions provides a more realistic |
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propagation of sensitivities, and thus physical linkages. |
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% |
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\ml{PH: So based on this, do way say we prefer free-slip since |
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it mimics more closely the higher-resolution model sensitivities???} |
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The present calculations in part confirm expected responses, |
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such as increase in ice export with increasing ice thickness, |
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or decreasing ice export with increasing sea surface temperature. |
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They also reveal mechanisms which, although plausible, |
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cannot be readily anticipated. |
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As an example we presented precipitation sensitivities which exhibit |
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a annual oscillatory behavior, with negative sensitivities prevailing |
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throughout the fall and early winter, and positive sensitivities from |
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late winter though spring. This behavior can be traced to the |
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different impact of snow accumulation over ice, depending |
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on the stage of ice evolution. For growing ice, snow accumulation |
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suppresses ice growth (negative sensitivity), whereas for melting ice, |
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snow accumulation suppresses ice melt (positive sensitivity). |
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A secondary effect is the snow accumulation on downstream ice export |
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(positive sensitivity). Differences between snow and rain seem negligible |
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in our case study since precipitation is through the form of snow for |
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an overwhelming part of the year. |
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Given the automated nature of adjoint code generation, and the |
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nonlinearity of the problem when considered over sufficiently |
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long time scales, independent tests are needed to gain confidence |
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in the adjoint solutions. We have presented such tests in the form |
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of finite difference experiments (guided by the adjoint solution), |
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and comparing cost function differences inferred from forward |
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perturbation experiments with differences inferred via adjoint |
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sensitivity information. We found very good quantitative agreement |
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for initial ice thickness, and sea surface temperature perturbations. |
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As described above, sensitivities to precipitation show an annual |
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oscillatory behavior which is confirmed by forward perturbation experiments. |
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In terms of amplitude, precipitation shows a larger deviation |
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(order of 50 \%) between adjoint-based and finite difference perturbations. |
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Furthermore, finite difference perturbations exhibit an asymmetry |
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between positive and negative perturbation (of equal size). |
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This points to the fact that on multi-year time scales nonlinear |
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effects can no longer be ignored, and to limits of the usefulness |
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of the adjoint sensitivity information. |
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The results shown open up the prospect for application of the |
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MITgcm/sim adjoint system to a variety |
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of sensitivity studies of Arctic and Southern Ocean climate variability. |
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Given the urgency of understanding cryospheric changes, |
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efforts are now under way to employ adjoint methods also in the |
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1.4 |
context of large-scale land ice sheet models \citep{heim-bugn:09}. |
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1.3 |
The MITgcm/sim adjoint system has matured to a stage where coupled |
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ocean/sea-ice estimation becomes feasible. |
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A coupled ocean/sea-ice estimate of the Labrador Sea for the |
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mid-1990s and mid-2000s has recently successfully been conducted by |
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\cite{fent:09} and will be reported elsewhere. |
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Steps both toward a regional Arctic and a full global system are now |
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within reach. |
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The prospect of using observations of one component |
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(e.g. daily sea-ice concentration) to constrain the other component |
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(near-surface ocean properties) through the information propagation |
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of the adjoint holds promise in deriving better, dynamically consistent |
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estimates of the polar environments. |
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1.1 |
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