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vortexphysics

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Aspects of this topic are discussed in the following places at Britannica.

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  • comparison to whirlpool ( in whirlpool )

    rotary oceanic current, a large-scale eddy that is produced by the interaction of rising and falling tides. Similar currents that exhibit a central downdraft are termed vortexes and occur where coastal and bottom configurations provide narrow passages of considerable depth. Slightly different is vortex motion in streams; at certain stages of turbulent flow, rotating currents with central...

  • eddies ( in eddy )

    ...critical velocity; they represent a flow of fluid into the space behind the obstacle, and this inflow begins only when the general flow is fast enough to produce a lowered pressure there. Eddies or vortices (whirlpools) so produced can also cause sound. Many sounds, both natural and man-made, occur in this way.

  • fluid dynamics ( in fluid mechanics: Navier-stokes equation )

    ...also curl curl v]. Another name for (∇ × v), which expresses particularly vividly the characteristics of the local flow pattern that it represents, is vorticity. In a sample of fluid that is rotating like a solid body with uniform angular velocity ω0, the vorticity lies in the same direction as the axis of rotation, and its...

    in fluid mechanics: Lift )

    ...easily and is shed more quickly because the edges of the plate are sharp. Figure 18B shows some streamlines for the same plate a moment after shedding when the detached eddy, known as the starting vortex, is still in view. The circulation around the closed loop shown by a broken curve in this diagram was zero before the eddy formed and, according to Thomson’s theorem (see above Potential...

  • mechanistic theories of Helmholtz ( in Helmholtz, Hermann von: Early life )

    ...geometry. He attacked and solved equations that had long frustrated physicists and mathematicians. In 1858 he published the paper “On the Integrals of Hydrodynamic Equations to Which Vortex Motions Conform.” This was not only a mathematical tour de force, but, for a brief time, it also seemed to provide a key to the fundamental structure of matter. One of the consequences...

    in physical science, principles of: Development of the atomic theory )

    ...empty space postponed for many decades the general reacceptance of the concept of atoms. The discovery in 1858 by the German scientist and philosopher Hermann von Helmholtz of the permanence of vortex motions in perfectly inviscid fluids encouraged the invention—throughout the latter half of the 19th century and especially in Great Britain—of models in which vortices in a...

  • occurrence in atmospheric phenomena ( in climate: Winds in the stratosphere and mesosphere )

    During the winter there is, in the mean, an intense cyclonic vortex about the poles in the lower stratosphere. Over the North Pole this vortex has an embedded mean trough over northeastern North America and over northeastern Asia, whereas over the Pacific there is a weak anticyclonic vortex. The winter cyclonic vortex over the South Pole is much more symmetrical than the one over the North...

    in climate: Propagation and development of waves )

    ...and how they relate to surface systems is described by an elegant theory developed in the late 1940s called quasigeostrophic theory. A measure of the tendency for a fluid to rotate is known as vorticity and is given by the following equation: ζ = ∂v/∂x – ∂u/∂y (5) where ζ is the relative vorticity with...

    in climate: Propagation and development of waves )

    ...of f to lower magnitude of f. The effect of pressure increases and decreases is greatest when the wavelength is relatively short, such as when the effects of the advection of Earth’s vorticity are overwhelmed by the effects of advection of relative vorticity.

  • place in atomistic philosophy ( in atomism: Atoms as sheer extension )

    ...by taking the places vacated by other particles that, however, were themselves in motion. Thus the motion of a single particle involved the motion of an entire closed chain of particles, called a vortex. As a result of the original motion, some particles were gradually ground into a spherical form, and the resulting intermediary space became filled with the surplus splinters or...

Citations

MLA Style:

"vortex." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 14 Oct. 2008 <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/632932/vortex>.

APA Style:

vortex. (2008). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved October 14, 2008, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/632932/vortex

vortex

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  • occurrence in lee wave lee wave

    ...The strongest up current then occurs not over the wind-facing slope but at the front of the first lee wave. If the lee slope is very steep and high, the waves may be of sufficient amplitude for a rotor, a vortex with a horizontal axis of rotation perpendicular to the direction of flow, to occur. In a rotor, the wind at the ground blows toward the mountain.

vortex (physics)
  • comparison to whirlpool whirlpool

    rotary oceanic current, a large-scale eddy that is produced by the interaction of rising and falling tides. Similar currents that exhibit a central downdraft are termed vortexes and occur where coastal and bottom configurations provide narrow passages of considerable depth. Slightly different is vortex motion in streams; at certain stages of turbulent flow, rotating currents with central...

  • eddies eddy

    ...critical velocity; they represent a flow of fluid into the space behind the obstacle, and this inflow begins only when the general flow is fast enough to produce a lowered pressure there. Eddies or vortices (whirlpools) so produced can also cause sound. Many sounds, both natural and man-made, occur in this way.

  • fluid dynamics ( in fluid mechanics: Navier-stokes equation )

    ...also curl curl v]. Another name for (∇ × v), which expresses particularly vividly the characteristics of the local flow pattern that it represents, is vorticity. In a sample of fluid that is rotating like a solid body with uniform angular velocity ω0, the vorticity lies in the same direction as the axis of rotation, and its...

    in fluid mechanics: Lift )

    ...easily and is shed more quickly because the edges of the plate are sharp. Figure 18B shows some streamlines for the same plate a moment after shedding when the detached eddy, known as the starting vortex, is still in view. The circulation around the closed loop shown by a broken curve in this diagram was zero before the eddy formed and, according to Thomson’s theorem (see above Potential...

  • mechanistic theories of Helmholtz Helmholtz, Hermann von

    ...geometry. He attacked and solved equations that had long frustrated physicists and mathematicians. In 1858 he published the paper “On the Integrals of Hydrodynamic Equations to Which Vortex Motions Conform.” This was not only...

multiple-vortex tornado (meteorology)
  • classification of tornadoes tornado

    In some violent tornadoes, secondary vortices may form in the annulus, giving rise to what is termed a multiple-vortex tornado. In these secondary vortices, air spins rapidly around the axes while the vortices themselves rotate around the periphery of the central eye. Small secondary vortices are also called suction vortices when they are most evident in the corner region, the area where the...

  • work of Fujita Fujita, T. Theodore

    ...of April 11–12, 1965, was the first systematic analysis of a regional outbreak. Based on this study and an airborne observation of a large dust devil, he put forth the concept of the “multiple vortex tornado,” that is, a system of smaller vortices circling around a common centre. These small embedded vortices—sometimes termed suction vortices—are often found in...

The Vortex (work by Rivera)
  • discussed in biography Rivera, José Eustasio

    Colombian poet and novelist whose novel La vorágine (1924; The Vortex), a powerful denunciation of the exploitation of the rubber gatherers in the upper Amazon jungle, is considered by many critics to be the best of many South American novels with jungle settings.

  • Latin American literature Latin American literature

    ...Bárbara (1929; Doña Bárbara) by the Venezuelan Rómulo Gallegos, and La vorágine (1924; The Vortex) by the Colombian José Eustasio Rivera. All three are set in rural contexts and depict man’s struggle to tame nature and make it subservient and bountiful. Each, as is the...

tornado vortex signature (meteorology)
  • detection of tornadoes tornado

    ...pressure that is bounded by the maximum tangential winds (the fastest winds circulating around the centre of the tornado). The radar indication of intense concentrated rotation is called the tornado vortex signature, although this area does not always evolve into a tornado core. These improvements have allowed forecasters to increase warning times while reducing false alarms.

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