History
Equa's simulation technology was invented in the mid eighties
at the Swedish Institute of Applied Mathematics in a project for Statoil.
The models developed here proved to be both efficient and practical for large-scale
industrial simulation.
Some years later, a multi-disciplinary team was formed to
develop a full simulation environment based on this approach. Whilst Magnus
Lindgren and Lars Eriksson contributed with solid computer science and numerical
competence, Axel Bring and Per Sahlin brought with them application perspective
and general modeling experience. And so it was that in late 1989 the first
prototype of IDA Simulation Environment (IDA SE) was introduced in an Apollo
workstation environment.
In the early nineties, Olympic medallist mathematicians Pavel
Grozman and Alexander Shapovalov joined the team and several application projects
were performed. Amongst them, the first real end-user application (clean room
design for ABB Airtech in 1993).
In 1995, the team founded Equa. The company was backed by
a significant contract to develop a new generation building simulator based
on the IDA technology.
In 1998, the first software product, IDA Indoor Climate and
Energy (IDA ICE), was released, and soon thereafter IDA Simulation Environment
was made commercially available. Today, the company is owned by the original
founders along with other key employees.
The Windows 3.0 GUI of the first IDA application for clean room design. Already
in 1992 IDA had some unique properties such as: vector and matrix variables
with dynamic dimensions, full treatment of discontinuities and hysteresis,
external functions, automatic tearing (cut-set) algorithms etc. Problems with
a few thousand differential-algebraic equations were managed on the standard
PC:s of the day.