You cannot see rainbows from space.
No. Because the sun is out in the outer space and the rainbow is only at the inside of the earth and you could see it,it appears after raining ...
Yes, you would see the same way in outer space as you do on Earth.
Rainbows are caused by sunlight glinting off tiny water particles in the sky, bouncing the light back towards the observer. In other words, any time you see a rainbow directly in front of you, the Sun is directly behind you, and your shadow points at the center of the circle the rainbow is describing. There are no fields of water droplets in space to do this, although the astronauts often report that their dumped urine (which freezes instantly into ice specks) can look quite colorful if the sun hits them just right.
Are you crazy? No there are no farmers in outer space.
In Outer Space was created in 1983.
No. Because the sun is out in the outer space and the rainbow is only at the inside of the earth and you could see it,it appears after raining ...
Reading Rainbow - 1983 Alistair in Outer Space 3-7 was released on: USA: 24 June 1986
Yes, you would see the same way in outer space as you do on Earth.
No. Not in outer space. That would require atmosphere and moisture. There is refracted light in space, however. Just not in rainbow form.
No
Yes,at night when the sun is gone, there is no light to hide space so we see space at night.
A Telescope
yes
You cannot see our sun.
Becuase so they can see the beauty of the whole outer space on the moon:)
yes bob
stars, planets, galaxies, darkness