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AMS Glossary
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Section SS index971-979 of 1376 terms

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  • steady flow—A system in which the flow characteristics, such as depth of flow or mean velocity, at any given point, do not change with time.
  • steady motion—Same as steady state.
  • steady-state hypothesis—Same as stationary-state hypothesis.
  • steady state—(Also called steady motion, stationary motion.) A fluid motion in which the velocities at every point of the field are independent of time; streamlines and trajectories are identical.
    Sometimes it is further assumed that all other properties of the fluid (pressure, density, etc.) are also independent of time. All local derivatives in the fundamental equations then vanish. A steady-state solution to a theoretical problem suggests two further questions: how the steady state came to exist (the initial-value problem), and whether it will persist (the instability problem).
  • steam devils—Gentle whirls of foggy air that form within steam fog when cold air advects over a warmer body of water or saturated surface; analogous to dust devils, except that water droplets are the tracers that make the whirl visible.
    These are usually shallow phenomena in the surface layer of a thermal internal boundary layer.
  • steam fog—(Or sea smoke; also called arctic sea smoke, antarctic sea smoke, frost smoke, water smoke, sea mist, steam mist.) Fog formed when water vapor is added to air that is much colder than the vapor's source; most commonly, when very cold air drifts across relatively warm water.
    No matter what the nature of the vapor source (warm water, industrial combustion exhaust, exhaled breath), its equilibrium vapor pressure is greater than that corresponding to the colder air; thus, the water vapor, upon becoming mixed with and cooled by the cold air, rapidly condenses. It should be noted that this mechanism never allows the fog to actually reach the vapor source. Also, upon further mixing in sufficiently turbulent or convective flow (only a slight degree is needed), the fog particles evaporate at a more or less well defined upper limit of the fog. Note, also, that although advection of air is necessary to produce steam fog, it differs greatly from an advection fog in the usual sense, which is caused by warm, moist air moving over a cold surface. Steam fog is commonly observed over lakes and streams on cold autumn mornings as well as in polar regions. It is sometimes confused with ice fog, but its particles are entirely liquid. At temperatures below −29°C (−20°F), these may freeze into droxtals and create a type of ice fog that may be known as frost smoke.
  • steam mist—Same as steam fog.
  • steam—1. A popular term for mixing cloud. 2. Water vapor at a temperature greater than the boiling point.
  • steepness—Usually defined as the ratio of wave height to wavelength, but occasionally defined as the amplitude multiplied by the wavenumber of the wave.
    See wave steepness.
  • steering current—Same as steering flow.

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