It means there are water droplets in the air being refracted by sunlight. It happens somewhere every day of the year. The atmosphere doesn't care what human-made holiday it might be.
The sun has to come over your shoulder to see a rainbow because if the sun is next to the rainbow it is near impossible to see. see
when you see a rainbow you see light
If it is sunny after the rain has stopped, you are likely to see a rainbow in the sky.
always!
When it is sunny and cloudy and starts raining
the wonderful day
you will be lucky a have a great day
Does everyone see the same rainbow
You see a rainbow because you want to, and you do because you feel like it.
We see rainbow due to the refraction of the sun's rays by rain .
No, as you move the rainbow you see moves too. No, because the bit of the rainbow you see is part of a circle and circles have no end. However, you can direct someone else to the place where YOU see the end of your rainbow (but THEY will not see it when they get there).
There is no color your eye can see that is not in the rainbow.
There is no color your eye can see that is not in the rainbow.
Yes. See Leviticus ch.23. The entire Talmud-tractate of Yoma is about Yom Kippur.
The sun has to come over your shoulder to see a rainbow because if the sun is next to the rainbow it is near impossible to see. see
No. In order to see a rainbow in front of you, there must be a source of light behind you, and the rainbow you see will only have the colors of the source in it.
One doesn't have to be at any specific angle to see a rainbow. What is Dependent on seeing the rainbow is the location of the rain, and sun relative to you. The sun is always behind a rainbow when seen. So you would be in front of the rainbow, rain, and the sun. Also, No two people see the same rainbow unless a picture or video was taken of the rainbow.