As a child growing up in South Korea, Hyunglok Kim asked big questions about droughts and floods. Now he watches water from space.
“When I was 12 or 13 years old, I was asking questions like why we didn’t have water in some areas of Africa, while we had too much water over some areas of Bangladesh,” Kim said. “I was so excited to see data obtained from space. That helped me understand why we don’t have much water in some areas and why people suffer from water deficiencies there, and it connected. It is related more to a personal feeling I have when I see people struggling with water deficiencies.”
Kim, whose doctoral research at the University of Virginia involves monitoring soil moisture with multiple Earth-orbiting satellites that make microwave readings of the planet’s surface, is still asking questions – questions that are closer to answers due to advancing technology.
“One of the tools on which I rely is 鶹ƽ Rivanna supercomputer,” Kim said. “It has saved me more than 10 years’ worth of research time. Another example is the many improvements in satellites and sensors. Thanks to these new techniques, we can now retrieve very detailed and accurate information from space. All in all, the technical advancements made by our senior scientists have been the major impetus of my research.”

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