ALL rainbows are round. That is, the part of it that you see is part of a circle.
If you mean a rainbow that's a complete circle, that's possible if you're up in
an airplane looking down, or on top of a mounain looking down into a valley.
Just like every other rainbow, the sun must be behind you, and the air in front
of you must be full of water droplets.
The rainbow is actually circular in shape and it appears semi circular in shape to you as the clouds block out the lower part of it resulting in what you see.
a rainbow
I'm guessing it has something to do with how a rainbow starts after it rains.
The rainbow has a name, but it's the scientific name. Rainbow also goes by Moonbow. But, rainbow is called rainbow because the colors in the rainbow. ROYGBIV when you see a rainbow its called a spectrum. ROY G. BIV is the name... for RED, ORANGE, YELLOW, GREEN, BLUE, INDIGO, VIOLET...
No. The center of the rainbow is always directly in front of you, opposite the sun. If you move, the rainbow moves.
There's a Rainbow 'Round My Shoulder was created in 1928.
Rainbow 'Round My Shoulder - 1952 is rated/received certificates of: Sweden:Btl
Rainbow Round the Corner - 1944 is rated/received certificates of: UK:U
Rainbow 'Round My Shoulder - 1952 was released on: USA: September 1952 Sweden: 10 January 1953 Turkey: March 1955
No. A rainbow is always round. On the ground, the bottom part is hidden, but in the sky, like from the view of a flying airplane, it can be seen as a round shape. Check the link below for more information:
A rainbow?
Camera Three - 1955 Rainbow 'Round My Shoulder 4-41 was released on: USA: 14 June 1959
A rainbow is actually round. On the ground, the bottom part is hidden. In the sky, like from the view of a flying airplane, it can be seen as a round shape. Check the Popsci link for more information.
get white marshmallows, roll them into balls, dip in food colouring and water and leave to dry, then walla! you have your rainbow planets
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.
Because from every point on the rainbow, the angle between the direction to thesun and the direction to your eye has to be the same angle. The only collectionof points that can do that is all the points on a circle.
The rainbow is actually circular in shape and it appears semi circular in shape to you as the clouds block out the lower part of it resulting in what you see.