Among engineers, Reynolds is still famous for his studies of fluid flow as it makes the transition from laminar, or smooth, orderly flow to turbulent flow, in which inertial forces cause random eddies and vortices. The Reynolds number, Re, is a concept familiar to mechanical and aerospace engineers everywhere. It is a dimensionless number (meaning there are no units, like feet per second, but a plain number) measuring the ratio of inertial forces to viscous forces. This gives a quantitative measure of the relative importance of inertial and viscous forces in various flow conditions. Laminar flow occurs at low Reynolds numbers, where viscous forces dominate, and turbulent flow occurs at high Reynolds numbers, where inertial forces dominate.