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B1 中级 英语 15:42 Educational

Divergence and curl: The language of Maxwell's equations, fluid flow, and more

3Blue1Brown · 4,999,638 次观看 · 添加于 3 周前

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00:00

[Translated by Grant Sanderson. Submit corrections at criblate.com] Today, you and I are going to get into divergence and curl.

00:05

To make sure we're all on the same page, let's begin by talking about vector fields.

00:10

Essentially a vector field is what you get if you associate each

00:14

point in space with a vector, some magnitude and direction.

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Maybe those vectors represent the velocities of particles of fluid at

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each point in space, or maybe they represent the force of gravity at

00:25

many different points in space, or maybe a magnetic field strength.

00:30

Quick note on drawing these, often if you were to draw the vectors to scale,

00:34

the longer ones end up just cluttering up the whole thing,

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so it's common to basically lie a little and artificially shorten ones

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that are too long, maybe using color to give some vague sense of length.

00:46

In principle, vector fields in physics might change over time.

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In almost all real-world fluid flow, the velocities of particles in a given

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region of space will change over time in response to the surrounding context.

00:58

Wind is not a constant, it comes in gusts.

01:02

An electric field changes as the charged particles characterizing it move around.

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But here we'll just be looking at static vector fields,

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which maybe you think of as describing a steady-state system.

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Also, while such vectors could in principle be three-dimensional,

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or even higher, we're just going to be looking at two dimensions.

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An important idea which regularly goes unsaid is that you can often

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understand a vector field which represents one physical phenomenon

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better by imagining what if it represented a different physical phenomenon.

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What if these vectors describing gravitational force instead defined a fluid flow?

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What would that flow look like?

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And what can the properties of that flow tell us about the original gravitational force?

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And what if the vectors defining a fluid flow were thought

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of as describing the downhill direction of a certain hill?

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Does such a hill even exist?

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And if so, what does it tell us about the original flow?

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These sorts of questions can be surprisingly helpful.

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For example, the ideas of divergence and curl are particularly viscerally understood

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when the vector field is thought of as representing fluid flow,

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even if the field you're looking at is really meant to describe something else,

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like an electric field.

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Here, take a look at this vector field, and think of each

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vector as describing the velocity of a fluid at that point.

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Notice that when you do this, that fluid behaves in a very strange, non-physical way.

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Around some points, like these ones, the fluid seems to just spring into

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existence from nothingness, as if there's some kind of source there.

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Some other points act more like sinks, where the

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fluid seems to disappear into nothingness.

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The divergence of a vector field at a particular point of the plane tells you

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how much this imagined fluid tends to flow out of or into small regions near it.

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For example, the divergence of our vector field evaluated at all

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of those points that act like sources will give a positive number.

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And it doesn't just have to be that all of the fluid is flowing away from that point.

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The divergence would also be positive if it was just that the fluid coming into

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