We often hear that a car in the wake of another car loses downforce because it is in "dirty" air. This effect supposedly extends a good 50 meters or more behind a F1 car. We also hear that it reduces front downforce more. Considering a car with the front wing 30 meters behind, the rear is like 34 meters behind, not a dramatic difference, so I interpret (wrongly?) this front bias as meaning that the wings suffer a greater loss of performance than the floor-diffuser combo.
What exactly is "dirty" about this air that costs so much downforce to the trailing car?
Is it just turbulent, with random lateral velocity components? The rear wing vortices themselves don't seem to survive much beyond 10 meters...
Is it the vertical velocity added to the air? It is not like that is going to result in a vacuum below it, a new mass of air moves in to fill the potential gap...
Is it the speed added to the air in the direction of movement reducing the relative air speed for the car behind?
Is it all of the above? Is it something else?