No. A rainbow appears only during or after rainfall and the sun is bright.
While smog is a mixture of smoke and fog, and there wont be fog if the sun is shinning bright in the sky.
its called smog.Answer:It can be one of two types of smog:"Classic" smog which id formed by smoke, sulfur dioxide and fogPhotochemical smog which is formed from reactive hydrocarbons, nitrogen oxides, ozone and sunlight.
Smog is not black. The original smog in London England was formed of sulfur dioxice from coal smoke and fog (hence the name) and was, at best greyer than ordinary fog. The present photochemical smog, formed from automobile exhaust and nitrogen oxides in the presence of sunlight, is brownish yellow when dense enough.
2 penises = rainbow :D
Photochemical smog is formed by the action of sunlight on pollutants such as hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides. It irritates your eyes, throat, and lungs and can also harm plants and other living things.
Photochemical smog is formed when sunlight reacts with pollutants like nitrogen oxides and volatile organic compounds from vehicle emissions. This reaction forms ground-level ozone and other harmful pollutants. Photochemical smog can cause respiratory issues, eye irritation, and damage to vegetation.
The Rainbow/Push Coalition
Photochemical smog is formed from fossil fuel pollutants, like emissions from vehicles and industrial processes, reacting in the presence of sunlight. This type of smog is characterized by high levels of ozone and other harmful pollutants that can have negative effects on human health and the environment.
Smog
Ozone and smog are both air pollutants. Ozone is a secondary pollutant formed when emissions from vehicles and industrial sources react with sunlight, while smog is a combination of pollutants, including ozone, formed from vehicle emissions and industrial processes.
If Chuck Norris has too many skittles he can, then he barfs and a rainbow is formed.
a rainbow is not shaped like a arc its a circle
No, the ozone layer is located in the stratosphere, which is above the troposphere where smog occurs. The ozone layer actually helps protect the Earth's surface from harmful ultraviolet radiation from the sun. Smog is formed by a reaction between pollutants in the lower atmosphere.