What is Enstrophy & Why Is It Used?

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Enstrophy is a measure used in fluid dynamics, defined as the mean square of vorticity, which is the curl of the velocity field. It characterizes the motion of incompressible fluids by focusing on their vorticity rather than velocity at each point. Enstrophy serves as a conserved quantity in ideal fluids without dissipation or external forces, making it significant in theoretical studies. Understanding enstrophy helps in analyzing fluid behavior and dynamics more effectively. This concept is particularly relevant in the context of vector fields and fluid motion.
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Hi,

I'm doing some work and keep coming across Enstrophy. Wikipedia gives a description that provides some insight, however I was hoping that someone could explain why its a measure that is used and what does it tell us?
 
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If we had a vector field, take for example a field that denotes the velocity \vec{v} of a fluid at every point throughout the fluid, then the vorticity \vec{\omega} is defined as the curl of the velocity, i.e., \vec{\omega}:=\nabla\times\vec{v}. The enstrophy is defined as the mean square of the of the vorticity.

An incompressible fluid can be described entirely by its vorticity field. In other words, we can characterize a fluid's motion entirely by specifying exactly how much it circulates around every point [instead of specifying its velocity at each point]. Enstrophy is a useful concept when we work with vorticity fields: e.g. enstrophy is a conserved quantity when a fluid has no dissipation or external driving forces.

Here's a good reference: http://physics.aps.org/articles/v4/20
 
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Thanks Jolb,

It makes sense in relation to vector fields!

Now I can continue to read this paper.
 
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