Thank you, dbailey. However, I am still confused about the difference between F2000 and B1850. My understanding is that F test is fixed ocean module to reduce the amount of calculation.That is essentially correct. The F2000 is a year 2000 control run where the greenhouse gases and other forcing are fixed at year 2000. The F compset is the so-called standalone CAM compset with specified SST and ice fraction as opposed to the B which is fully-coupled.
Glad to have your answer, dbailey. That would help me a lot. Thank youThese are more of a scientific question. I recommend checking out the AMIP literature for this. The short answer is that if you specify the SST, the climate conditions should be representative of 2000, but will not precisely be 2000.. However, a fully-coupled simulation (B) evolves freely on it's own. I recommend watching the lectures from the 2022 CESM Tutorial:
CESM Tutorial 2022 | Community Earth System Model
www.cesm.ucar.edu
Hello,dbailey.That is essentially correct. The F2000 is a year 2000 control run where the greenhouse gases and other forcing are fixed at year 2000. The F compset is the so-called standalone CAM compset with specified SST and ice fraction as opposed to the B which is fully-coupled.
Thank you, dbailey. Let me try it outThe B2000 is no longer supported. We decided that the year 2000 is not really a suitable control climate. However, I believe you can do it by replacing 1850 with 2000 in the long compset name and adding the --run-unsupported flag.