shelly wrote:I am not thinking of old skirts, but of leading edge of the floor.
If you take a lateral view of the car, you would see the mixing line as a bow shaped curve, with the apex slightly bended downward.
The mixing line is a line of zero average velocity in the reference of the car; intense mixing takes place across this line, but the outer flow sees it as boundary.
If you imagine the car exhausting thick colured smoke like aerobatic planes you would have a visulisation of the added virtual bodywork like a cloud that is thick near the leading edge (where the effect is dominant) and then strands away under the floor and towards the rear of the car as complete mixing takes place.
I hope that now I have explained myself better.
I'm afraid fluids don't work this way:
There is simply no reason for both flows to not intermix.
Of course the momentum from both flows are conserved, so resulting flow is bended accordingly, but there will be no virtual wall. Both flows just follow pressure gradients.
My understanding of how it works is basically that as you add this highly energetic exhaust flow (both temp and speed are in fact energy), you allow low pressure area starting at the leading edge of the floor to reach further rearwards, creating more downforce due to greater area it acts on. You need every joule of energy to fight against this increasing pressure gradient.
It achives it probably by reducing the thickness of floor's boundary layers of (more or less) stationary air, so you achive more mass flow to the rear. But it's just my imagination.