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(Book 13.10. Read and understand the descriptions of the starting
vortex and the bathtub vortex at the end of 13.13.)
The circulation along any closed contour C inside the fluid is
defined as

Stokes's theorem:

where S is any surface that has the contour C as its edge.
(Of course, it is also necessary that the velocity field is
defined everywhere on S.)
Kelvin's theorem: if
- the closed contour C is a material contour (always made
up of the same fluid particles);
- the flow is inviscid;
- the flow is barotropic, where the density depends at most on the
pressure (not on both pressure and temperature, say);
then
is constant:

This includes incompressible inviscid flows and isentropic inviscid
compressible flows.
Proof of the theorem:


Applications:
- Flows that start irrotational remain so outside the boundary layers
and wake:

- Bathtub vortex. See the description at the end of 3.13
- Starting vortex. See the description at the end of 3.13
- Trailing vortices.
You should now be able to make 13.7
Up: Vorticity Dynamics
Previous: Geometry