This subject became more interesting and should thus be rewarded a thread of its own, or so I believe anyway.
If you behold an air-stream separated by an object such as a wing-profile, or an F1 car for that matter:
Total pressure-pt, is static pressure-ps plus dynamic pressure-pd. Then if total pressure is held constant:
ps1 + pd1 = ps2 + pd2
The above gives a static pressure differential, ps1 - ps2 (which creates Force), equal to pd2 - pd1.
When pd is density * speed squared / 2 and Force is static pressure differential times Area, the resulting force is:
area * density * (speed2^2 - speed1^2)/2.
This force can be substantial, if you can arrange the air-speed under the car to be 100 m/s, while the speed on top is only 60, downforce would be about 7700 N with a floor-area of 2 sq. meters.
But if you find a way, through a novel diffuser for example, to speed up the air under the car with 10%, downforce increases to 10200N, or with 32%.