A well-behaved adjoint sensitivity technique for chaotic dynamical systems is
presented. The method arises from the specialisation of established variational
techniques to the unstable periodic orbits of the system. On such trajectories,
the adjoint problem becomes a time periodic boundary value problem. The adjoint
solution remains bounded in time and does not exhibit the typical unbounded
exponential growth observed using traditional methods over unstable
non-periodic trajectories (Lea et al., Tellus 52 (2000)). This enables the
sensitivity of period averaged quantities to be calculated exactly, regardless
of the orbit period, because the stability of the tangent dynamics is decoupled
effectively from the sensitivity calculations. We demonstrate the method on two
prototypical systems, the Lorenz equations at standard parameters and the
Kuramoto-Sivashinky equation, a one-dimensional partial differential equation
with chaotic behaviour. We report a statistical analysis of the sensitivity of
these two systems based on databases of unstable periodic orbits of size 10^5
and 4x10^4, respectively. The empirical observation is that most orbits predict
approximately the same sensitivity. The effects of symmetries, bifurcations and
intermittency are discussed and future work is outlined in the conclusions