Vector calculus | Analytic geometry | Differential operators | Linear operators in calculus

Curl (mathematics)

In vector calculus, the curl is a vector operator that describes the infinitesimal circulation of a vector field in three-dimensional Euclidean space. The curl at a point in the field is represented by a vector whose length and direction denote the magnitude and axis of the maximum circulation. The curl of a field is formally defined as the circulation density at each point of the field. 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. Curl F is a notation common today to the United States and Americas. In many European countries, particularly in classic scientific literature, the alternative notation rot F is traditionally used, which is spelled as "rotor", and comes from the "rate of rotation", which it represents. For avoiding confusion modern authors tend to use the cross product notation with the del (nabla) operator ∇ × F, which also reveals the relation between curl(rotor), divergence, and gradient operators. Unlike the gradient and divergence, curl as formulated in vector calculus does not generalize simply to other dimensions; some are possible, but only in three dimensions is the geometrically defined curl of a vector field again a vector field. This deficiency is a direct consequence of the limitations of vector calculus; on the other hand, when expressed as an antisymmetric tensor field via the wedge operator of geometric calculus, the curl generalizes to all dimensions. The unfortunate circumstance is similar to that attending the 3-dimensional cross product, and indeed the connection is reflected in the notation ∇× for the curl. The name "curl" was first suggested by James Clerk Maxwell in 1871 but the concept was apparently first used in the construction of an optical field theory by James MacCullagh in 1839. (Wikipedia).

Curl (mathematics)
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What is the curl?

Free ebook http://tinyurl.com/EngMathYT A basic introduction to the curl of a vector field - one of the basic operations of vector calculus. I show how to calculate the curl and discuss its relationship with rotation and circulation density. Many examples are presented.

From playlist Engineering Mathematics

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Vector Calculus: Understanding Curl

Some formal and informal intuition regarding curl, a vector calculus concept.

From playlist Summer of Math Exposition Youtube Videos

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Curl of a vector field (ex. no.1): Vector Calculus

Free ebook http://tinyurl.com/EngMathYT I present and solve a simple example where the curl of a given vector field is sought. The curl is one of the basic operations of "vector calculus". Such and example is seen in 2nd year university mathematics. Such an example is seen in 2nd year uni

From playlist Engineering Mathematics

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Curl of a vector field (ex. no.2): Vector calculus

Free ebook http://tinyurl.com/EngMathYT I present a simple example where I compute the curl of a given vector field. I give a rough interpretation of the physical meaning of curl. Such an example is seen in 2nd year university mathematics courses.

From playlist Engineering Mathematics

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Curl of a vector field

Simple intro to the curl of a vector field and how to calculate it. The curl is one of the basic operations of vector calculus.

From playlist Engineering Mathematics

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Curl of vector fields

Download the free PDF http://tinyurl.com/EngMathYT A basic introduction to the curl of a vector field. I discuss how to calculate the curl and some geometric interpretation. Such ideas are important in fluid flow and are seen in vector calculus.

From playlist Engineering Mathematics

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Calculus 3: Divergence and Curl (12 of 32) What is the Curl? Part 1

Visit http://ilectureonline.com for more math and science lectures! In this video I will explain how a curl of a vector field is a measure of how much a vector field “circulates” around a given point, part 1 of 3. Next video in the series can be seen at: https://youtu.be/NkNF72kgNqg

From playlist CALCULUS 3 CH 8 DIVERGENCE AND CURL

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Physics - Advanced E&M: Ch 1 Math Concepts (12 of 55) What is the Curl of a Vector?

Visit http://ilectureonline.com for more math and science lectures! In this video I will explain, develop the equation, and give an example of the curl of a vector. Next video in this series can be seen at: https://youtu.be/BvO6FuRJHp4

From playlist PHYSICS 67 ADVANCED ELECTRICITY & MAGNETISM

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The Curl of a Vector Field: Measuring Rotation

This video introduces the curl operator from vector calculus, which takes a vector field (like the fluid flow of air in a room) and returns a vector field quantifying how much, and about what direction, the flow is locally rotating, or swirling, at every point. The curl is a fundamental b

From playlist Engineering Math: Vector Calculus and Partial Differential Equations

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Field Equations - Potential Formulation of electric field

In this lesson we complete our detailed justification for the potential formulation of the electric and magnetic field, focusing on the scalar potential. The last lesson ended abruptly and this lesson completes the topic. In our next lesson we convert Maxwell's equations from the electric/

From playlist QED- Prerequisite Topics

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VECTOR CALCULUS LECTURE 2

This lecture reviewed the basic properties of the wedge product and extended the discussion concerning gradient fields and the exterior derivative. We make a number of mathematical definitions concerning the wedge product (which appears in geometric algebra), the exterior derivative, gradi

From playlist MATH2305 -- Semester 1 2022

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PHYS 102 | The Curl 2 - Curl Examples (EDIT - 8:19 should be y*i + x*j)

Develop some conceptual insight into what the curl of a vector field is through these examples. -----Differential Maxwell's Eqns playlist - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9_sR6QqqcymvpKToRdhxjmQgCIU5xlDM -----Use the channel, or take the courses at edX - https://www.edx.org/course

From playlist PHYS 102 | Differential Form of Maxwell's Equations

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We DON'T Understand Magnetism (According to Quantum Mechanics) - Aharonov-Bohm Effect by Parth G

The first 1000 people to use the link will get a free trial of Skillshare Premium Membership: https://skl.sh/parthg06211 Scientists have often thought that magnetic (and electric) fields are fundamental quantities that relate to real, physical, observable things in the universe. And they

From playlist Quantum Physics by Parth G

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What is light?

Demonstrating that light is electromagnetic radiation from Maxwell's equations and how it is propagated.

From playlist Electricity & Magnetism

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Conformality, Curl, Curl's Counterpart, Cauchy-Riemann 'quations

Presenting: Problems Per Providing 'Perfect Pizza Proportions' 0:00 Problem formulation 3:18 1D divergence 9:26 2D divergence 10:46 Curl 14:59 Problem *re*formulation 16:53 Using div & curl 19:40 Conclusion 20:58 Afterword

From playlist Summer of Math Exposition Youtube Videos

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Here's What Maxwell's Equations ACTUALLY Mean.

Offset your carbon footprint on Wren: https://www.wren.co/start/parthg The first 100 people who sign up will have 10 extra trees planted in their name! Maxwell's Equations are a set of 4 equations that describe how electric and magnetic fields behave within our universe, as well as how th

From playlist Maxwell's Equations EXPLAINED

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The Potential to Make Electric Fields Easier to Deal With | Electromagnetism by Parth G

Some mathematical identities combined with Maxwell's equations allow us to define electric and magnetic potentials... but why are they useful? Hi everyone! In a recent video, I talked about how the magnetic vector potential was a different way to view magnetic fields, and why Quantum Mech

From playlist Classical Physics by Parth G

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2d curl intuition

A description of how vector fields relate to fluid rotation, laying the intuition for what the operation of curl represents.

From playlist Multivariable calculus

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