No. There has to be a spray of water in the air ahead of you. No air + no spray = no rainbow.
yes because like when you have a sprinkler on it creates a mini rainbow and after it rains some of the moister is still in the air that creates a rainbow that's why rainbows are always out after it rains.
Because in order to make a rainbow, there has to be water in the air.
When a rainbow is visible to you, the sun, your head, and the center of the rainbow's circular arc are all in a line. The sun must be in a clear sky, and the air in front of you must be filled with water droplets.
The moisture droplets in the air refract the light like a prism. This happens with millions of droplets, and depending on the angle at which you observe it, you see a rainbow.
When you see a rainbow, there is a direct straight line from the sun (in a clear sky), through your head, to the center of the rainbow (in water-droplet-filled air).
A Rainbow in Curved Air was created in 1969.
Light doesn't travel along the rainbow! It travels straight to your eye from every point of the rainbow. The points capable of producing a rainbow for a single individual observer happen to comprise a circular region in space.
Yes, he is about as straight as a rainbow.
Ask someone at Sarah Lawrence.
Strictly speaking, the answer is no. There is an implicit assumption that parallel lines refer to straight lines and, since there are no straight lines in a rainbow, there cannot be any parallel lines. The lines are concentric and so they never meet.
A rainbow is a circle if viewed from the air, and it is sometimes not even that, if it is faint enough
You should draw a line as straight as a rainbow with cheese.
No. There has to be a spray of water in the air ahead of you. No air + no spray = no rainbow.
its heat water and light and air no gas
at the end of the rainbow
Reading Rainbow - 1983 Hot-Air Henry 2-1 was released on: USA: 1984