Hello everyone,
I'd like to run CICE (last version) standalone at a rather fine resolution in the Ross sea as a test experiment. Even though the documentation states that CICE can be run on regional grid, I've been unable to configure it in such a way so far: the regional namelist option seems to be linked to the popgrid subroutine, yet the provided input data include global grids only. Is there some sort of POP grids dictionary somewhere, or a way to generate said grids? As for the resolution, I read in the doc that the CICE driver supports gx1, gx3 and tx1 grids. In the CESM CICE (5) doc, tx0.1 is also mentioned: has support for it been dropped in CICE6?
I had a quick glance at the rectangular grid type. Spacing can be set as a namelist option, but not the edges of the domain which seem to be hard-coded. My understanding is that it works with the ICE_GRID variable limiting the options to a 80x80 or a 128x128 domain, is that correct? Resolution would then be determined by the spacing. Would that be a way to address my problem?
I'd like to run CICE (last version) standalone at a rather fine resolution in the Ross sea as a test experiment. Even though the documentation states that CICE can be run on regional grid, I've been unable to configure it in such a way so far: the regional namelist option seems to be linked to the popgrid subroutine, yet the provided input data include global grids only. Is there some sort of POP grids dictionary somewhere, or a way to generate said grids? As for the resolution, I read in the doc that the CICE driver supports gx1, gx3 and tx1 grids. In the CESM CICE (5) doc, tx0.1 is also mentioned: has support for it been dropped in CICE6?
I had a quick glance at the rectangular grid type. Spacing can be set as a namelist option, but not the edges of the domain which seem to be hard-coded. My understanding is that it works with the ICE_GRID variable limiting the options to a 80x80 or a 128x128 domain, is that correct? Resolution would then be determined by the spacing. Would that be a way to address my problem?