Aditya Malik, Nalini Ratha, et al.
CAI 2024
Sensitivity analysis is a cornerstone of climate science, essential for understanding phenomena ranging from storm intensity to long-term climate feedbacks. However, computing these sensitivities using traditional physical models is often prohibitively expensive in terms of both computation and development time. While modern AI-based generative models are orders of magnitude faster to evaluate, computing sensitivities with them remains a significant bottleneck. This work addresses this challenge by applying the adjoint state method for calculating gradients in generative flow models. We apply this method to the cBottle generative model, trained on ERA5 and ICON data, to perform sensitivity analysis of any atmospheric variable with respect to sea surface temperatures. We quantitatively validate the computed sensitivities against the model’s own outputs. Our results provide initial evidence that this approach can produce reliable gradients, reducing the computational cost of sensitivity analysis from weeks on a supercomputer with a physical model to hours on a GPU, thereby simplifying a critical workflow in climate science.
Aditya Malik, Nalini Ratha, et al.
CAI 2024
Jie Ren, Zhenwei Dai, et al.
NeurIPS 2025
Rares Christian, Pavithra Harsha, et al.
NeurIPS 2025
Tian Gao, Amit Dhurandhar, et al.
NeurIPS 2025