Irrotational Vector Field

In fluid mechanics, an irrotational vector field is a vector field whose curl is zero. If the field is denoted as v, then
\nabla \times \mathbf{v} = 0 .
Since there is an identity of vector calculus which states that the curl of any gradient is zero:
\nabla \times \nabla \phi = 0
where φ is a scalar field, it follows that any irrotational field can be expressed as the gradient of a scalar potential:
\mathbf{v} = \nabla \phi .
If, in addition to being irrotational, a field is also incompressible, then the field is called a Laplacian field. An irrotational field is practically synonymous with a lamellar field. The adjective "irrotational" implies that irrotational fluid flow (whose velocity field is irrotational) has no rotational component: the fluid does not move in circular or helical motions; it does not form vortices. From the zero curl definition of an irrotational field, it can be deduced, by means of Stokes' theorem, that the circulation of any closed loop in the field is zero:
\oint_S \mathbf{v} \cdot \, d\mathbf{s} = \int\!\!\!\int_A \nabla \times \mathbf{v} \cdot d\mathbf{A} = 0
where A is the area enclosed by loop S. This lack of circulation means that irrotational field lines (streamlines of irrotational flow) do not form loops (or helices).

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
okinawa diet
new gods
durham city a.f.c.
plumian professor of astronomy and experimental philosophy
mac mcdonald
dick mcdonald
wahconah park
cybersix
charles wood, 2nd viscount halifax
cd projekt
longleaf pine
michael jackson (tv)
arbovirus
dfs 346
peripeteia
organometallic
derived row
our friends in the north
derived set
dr. slump
sabbatarianism
drumlin field
christopher eccleston
mitchell brothers
la plagne
combinatoriality
nimrud
nimud
garth algar
incompressible fluid
bisnovat 5
charles wood, 2nd earl of halifax
uss altamaha (cve 6)
charles wood, 3rd earl of halifax
uss barnes (cve 7)
howler monkey
uss block island (cve 8)
the legend of luke
egyptian ratscrew
eilert pilarm
errors and residuals in statistics
royal society of canada
antonio di pietro
casp