Streamfunction
From Glossary of Meteorology
streamfunction
- A parameter of two-dimensional, nondivergent flow, with a value that is constant along each streamline.
For flow in the (x,y) plane, the streamfunction ψ is related to the respective coordinate velocities u and v by the equationsIn meteorology the most common application of the streamfunction is in the assumption of geostrophic equilibrium. If variations in the Coriolis parameter f are ignored, the streamfunction in a constant-pressure surface is proportional to the geopotential gz, that is, ψ = gz/f; in an isentropic surface, it is ψ = (gz + cpT)/f, called the Montgomery streamfunction, where cp is the specific heat at constant pressure and T the Kelvin temperature.
- Stokes's streamfunction (
also called current function): If the flow is three-dimensional but is axisymmetric (i.e., the same in every plane containing the axis of symmetry), a Stokes's streamfunction ψ will exist such thatwhere vs is the speed in an arbitrary direction s, r is the distance from the axis of symmetry, and n is normal to the direction s, increasing to the left.
Note that Stokes's streamfunction has dimensions of volume per time. Streamfunctions can also be defined for more complex three-dimensional flows.