In fluid dynamics, the enstrophy
The enstrophy can be described as the integral of the square of the vorticity
or, in terms of the flow velocity,
Here, since the curl gives a scalar field in 2-dimensions (vortex) corresponding to the vector-valued velocity solving in the incompressible Navier–Stokes equations, we can integrate its square over a surface S to retrieve a continuous linear operator on the space of possible velocity fields, known as a current. This equation is however somewhat misleading. Here we have chosen a simplified version of the enstrophy derived from the incompressibility condition, which is equivalent to vanishing divergence of the velocity field,
More generally, when not restricted to the incompressible condition, or to two spatial dimensions, the enstrophy may be computed by:
where
is the Frobenius norm of the gradient of the velocity field