For Bob Steinke and the rest of the CI-WATER researchers
working on a sophisticated water model called ADHydro, their hard work and
dedication has culminated into the completion of the model.
“We have the code running, with groundwater, surface water, infiltration and channels, rivers, and lakes,” says Bob Steinke, a software
engineer at the University of Wyoming. “It’s running, it’s not crashing, and we
get results out, but now we have to make sure those results are right.”
ADHydro is a new hydrology model that will allow researchers
in the field to better understand water processes, including how fast water
soaks through the soil, how fast water flows over land, and more.
Now that ADHydro is running, researchers will continue to
work on the model and build on it, making it faster and more powerful.
“The next step is really performance improvement,” says Bob.
“We’ve got a lot of ways that we can improve the performance just in the serial
code itself, and then we want to parallelize it so that it can run on the
supercomputer and run faster.”
For the whole team working on ADHydro, getting it up and
running is a huge success, and something they’re proud of.
“We’re happy with our progress,” Bob says.
By Robin Rasmussen
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