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AGU: Journal of Geophysical Research, Oceans

 

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  • Oceanography: General: Instruments and techniques
  • Oceanography: Physical: General circulation
  • Oceanography: General: Physical and chemical properties of seawater
  • Oceanography: General: Numerical modeling
Abstract
Cited By (2)
 

Abstract

An adjoint sensitivity study of chlorofluorocarbons in the North Atlantic

Xingwen Li

MIT/WHOI Joint Program in Physical Oceanography, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

Carl Wunsch

Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

Adjoint sensitivities of CFC-11 concentrations and CFC-11/CFC-12 ratio ages in a North Atlantic general circulation model are analyzed. These sensitivities are compared with those of spiciness, T − (β/α) S, where α, β are the thermal and haline expansion coefficients, respectively. High-sensitivity fields are candidates for providing the most powerful constraints in the corresponding inverse problems. In the dual (adjoint) solutions all three variables exhibit the major ventilation pathways and define the associated timescales in the model. Overall, however, spiciness shows the highest sensitivity to the flow field. In the North Atlantic Deep Water, sensitivities of CFC properties and spiciness to the isopycnal mixing and thickness diffusion are of the same order of magnitude. In the lower subtropical thermocline, sensitivities of CFC properties to the isopycnal mixing and thickness diffusion are higher. The utility of this sensitivity is undermined by the need to reconstruct their boundary conditions. Given the influence of T, S measurements on the density field, they produce the most powerful constraints on the model on the large scale. It still remains possible, however, that transient tracers can provide a larger relative information content concerning the mixing process between the near-surface boundary layer and the thermocline but dependent upon the ability to reconstruct accurate initial and boundary conditions.

Received 23 June 2003; accepted 9 October 2003; published 3 January 2004.

Citation: Li, X., and C. Wunsch (2004), An adjoint sensitivity study of chlorofluorocarbons in the North Atlantic, J. Geophys. Res., 109, C01007, doi:10.1029/2003JC002014.

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