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In vector calculus, the curl (or rotor) is a vector operator that describes the rotation of a vector field. At every point in the field, the curl is represented by a vector. The attributes of this vector (length and direction) characterize the rotation at that point. The direction of the curl is the axis of rotation, as determined by the right-hand rule, and the magnitude of the curl is the magnitude of rotation. If the vector field represents the flow velocity of a moving fluid, then the curl is the circulation density of the fluid. A vector field whose curl is zero is called irrotational. The curl is a form of differentiation for vector fields. The corresponding form of the fundamental theorem of calculus is Stokes' theorem, which relates the surface integral of the curl of a vector field to the line integral of the vector field around the boundary curve. The alternative terminology rotor or rotational and alternative notations
[edit] DefinitionFor the equation in Cartesian coordinates, see Curl (mathematics)#Usage. The curl of a vector field F, denoted As such, the curl operator maps C1 functions from R3 to R3 to C0 functions from R3 to R3. Implicitly, curl is defined by:[1] Here The above formula means that the curl of a vector field is defined as the infinitesimal area-density of the circulation of that field. To this definition fit naturally (i) the Kelvin-Stokes theorem, as a global formula corresponding to the definition, and (ii) the following "easy to memorize" definition of the curl in orthogonal curvilinear coordinates, e.g. of course in cartesian coordinates, spherical, or cylindrical, or even elliptical or parabolical coordinates: If [edit] Intuitive interpretationSuppose the vector field describes the velocity field of a fluid flow (maybe a large tank of water or gas) and a small ball is located within the fluid or gas (the centre of the ball being fixed at a certain point). If the ball has a rough surface it will be made to rotate, by the fluid flowing past it. The rotation axis (oriented according to the right hand rule) points in the direction of the curl of the field at the centre of the ball, and the angular speed of the rotation is half the value of the curl at this point. Even if all the flow lines are parallel, the ball can start spinning if the fluid moves past it faster on one side than the other. [edit] UsageIn practice, the above definition is rarely used because in virtually all cases, the curl operator can be applied using some set of curvilinear coordinates, for which simpler representations have been derived. Although the usage of Expanded in Cartesian coordinates (see: Del in cylindrical and spherical coordinates for spherical and cylindrical coordinate representations), where i, j, and k are the unit vectors for the x-, y-, and z-axes, respectively. This expands as follows:[2] Although expressed in terms of coordinates, the result is invariant under proper rotations of the coordinate axes but the result inverts under reflection. Curl can also be generalised to tensors.[3] In Einstein notation, with the Levi-Civita symbol, curl is written as: or as: for unit vectors: Using the exterior derivative, the curl can be expressed as: Here [edit] Examples[edit] A simple vector fieldTake the vector field, which depends on x and y linearly: Its plot looks like this: Simply by visual inspection, we can see that the field is rotating. If we stick a paddle wheel anywhere, we see immediately its tendency to rotate clockwise. Using the right-hand rule, we expect the curl to be into the page. If we are to keep a right-handed coordinate system, into the page will be in the negative z direction. The lack of x and y directions is analogous to the cross product operation. If we calculate the curl: Which is indeed in the negative z direction, as expected. In this case, the curl is actually a constant, irrespective of position. The "amount" of rotation in the above vector field is the same at any point (x, y). Plotting the curl of F is not very interesting: [edit] A more involved exampleSuppose we now consider a slightly more complicated vector field: Its plot: We might not see any rotation initially, but if we closely look at the right, we see a larger field at, say, x=4 than at x=3. Intuitively, if we placed a small paddle wheel there, the larger "current" on its right side would cause the paddlewheel to rotate clockwise, which corresponds to a curl in the negative z direction. By contrast, if we look at a point on the left and placed a small paddle wheel there, the larger "current" on its left side would cause the paddlewheel to rotate counterclockwise, which corresponds to a curl in the positive z direction. Let's check out our guess by doing the math: Indeed the curl is in the positive z direction for negative x and in the negative z direction for positive x, as expected. Since this curl is not the same at every point, its plot is a bit more interesting: We note that the plot of this curl has no dependence on y or z (as it shouldn't) and is in the negative z direction for positive x and in the positive z direction for negative x. [edit] IdentitiesMain article: Vector calculus identities Consider the example ∇ × [ v × F ]. Using Cartesian coordinates, it can be shown that In the case where the vector field v and ∇ are interchanged: which introduces the Feynman subscript notation ∇F, which means the subscripted gradient operates only on the factor F. Another example is ∇ × [ ∇ × F ]. Using Cartesian coordinates, it can be shown that: which can be construed as a special case of the first example with the substitution v → ∇. The curl of the gradient of any scalar field [edit] Descriptive examples
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