What vector field property means “is the curl of another vector field?”

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I know that a vector field $\mathbf{F}$ is called irrotational if $\nabla \times \mathbf{F} = \mathbf{0}$ and conservative if there exists a function $g$ such that $\nabla g = \mathbf{F}$. Under suitable smoothness conditions on the component functions (so that Clairaut's theorem holds), conservative vector fields are irrotational, and under suitable topological conditions on the domain of $\mathbf{F}$, irrotational vector fields are conservative.

Moving up one degree, $\mathbf{F}$ is called incompressible if $\nabla \cdot \mathbf{F} = 0$. If there exists a vector field $\mathbf{G}$ such that $\mathbf{F} = \nabla \times \mathbf{G}$, then (again, under suitable smoothness conditions), $\mathbf{F}$ is incompressible. And again, under suitable topological conditions (the second cohomology group of the domain must be trivial), if $\mathbf{F}$ is incompressible, there exists a vector field $\mathbf{G}$ such that $\nabla \times\mathbf{G} = \mathbf{F}$.

It seems to me there ought to be a word to describe vector fields as shorthand for “is the curl of something” or “has a vector potential.” But a google search didn't turn anything up, and my colleagues couldn't think of a word either. Maybe I'm revealing the gap in my physics background. Does anybody know of such a word?