Aeronautics In
aerodynamics, the
lift distribution over a
finite wing may be approximated by assuming that each spanwise segment of the wing has a semi-infinite trailing vortex behind it. It is then possible to solve for the strength of the vortices using the criterion that there be no flow induced through the surface of the wing. This procedure is called the vortex panel method of
computational fluid dynamics. The strengths of the vortices are then summed to find the total approximate
circulation about the wing. According to the
Kutta–Joukowski theorem, lift per unit of span is the product of circulation, airspeed, and air density.
Atmospheric sciences The
relative vorticity is the vorticity relative to the Earth induced by the air velocity field. This air velocity field is often modeled as a two-dimensional flow parallel to the ground, so that the relative vorticity vector is generally scalar rotation quantity perpendicular to the ground. Vorticity is positive when – looking down onto the Earth's surface – the wind turns counterclockwise. In the northern hemisphere, positive vorticity is called
cyclonic rotation, and negative vorticity is
anticyclonic rotation; the nomenclature is reversed in the Southern Hemisphere. The
absolute vorticity is computed from the air velocity relative to an inertial frame, and therefore includes a term due to the Earth's rotation, the
Coriolis parameter. The
potential vorticity is absolute vorticity divided by the vertical spacing between levels of constant
(potential) temperature (or
entropy). The absolute vorticity of an air mass will change if the air mass is stretched (or compressed) in the vertical direction, but the potential vorticity is
conserved in an
adiabatic flow. As
adiabatic flow predominates in the atmosphere, the potential vorticity is useful as an approximate
tracer of air masses in the atmosphere over the timescale of a few days, particularly when viewed on levels of constant entropy. The
barotropic vorticity equation is the simplest way for forecasting the movement of
Rossby waves (that is, the
troughs and
ridges of 500
hPa geopotential height) over a limited amount of time (a few days). In the 1950s, the first successful programs for
numerical weather forecasting utilized that equation. In modern numerical weather forecasting models and
general circulation models (GCMs), vorticity may be one of the predicted variables, in which case the corresponding time-dependent equation is a
prognostic equation. Related to the concept of vorticity is the
helicity H(t), defined as :H(t) = \int_V \mathbf v \cdot \boldsymbol{\omega} \, dV where the integral is over a given volume V. In atmospheric science, helicity of the air motion is important in forecasting
supercells and the potential for
tornadic activity. ==See also==