Because when the observer is between the sun and the rain droplets the sun hits the rain droplets and then the rain droplets bend and form the colours.
Rainbow Lorikeet
To make a rainbow obby just made your courses and once your done paint everything in colourful colours!
Diamonds are 'colourful' because they reflect a rainbow of light through their facets.
Answer: Rainbow Fish are one of the colourful fish in the ocean,
Rainbow cakes! They're not the easiest of cakes to bake but they are still quite colourful! :DRed velvet cakes are a really rich red, but again, they are quite a challenge to bake!:D
Rainbows are colorful because sunlight is made up of different colors, each with a different wavelength. When sunlight passes through raindrops, the different colors are refracted (bent) at different angles, separating them and creating the rainbow effect that we see.
Yes. The colourful goodness will make you spontaneously combust if you look at it for too long or get too close. Just kidding. No, it can't.
Although rainbow lorikeets are literally all of the colours of the rainbow, their colouring makes them almost impossible to detect in their natural habitat of Australian native plants, with their colourful flowers. Their colours make them well camouflaged.
it means colourful so im asssuming it is a rainbow colour buh yh
A rainbow appears colorful because sunlight is made up of different colors that are separated and reflected through raindrops, creating the spectrum of colors we see in the sky. Each color corresponds to a different wavelength of light, producing the vibrant display.
Rainbow Lorikeets are among the most colourful of Australia's parrots. They have a bright red beak and a vividly deep blue to violet head and abdomen. They have green wings and a green tail, and orange and yellow feathers across their breast. The tail is yellow underneath.
Yes. Rainbow lorikeets are brightly coloured to merge in with their surroundings when they are feeding from colourful native blossoms. A rainbow lorikeet has an orange neck band, a purple head, and dark coloured bands on its abdomen which, together with its green back, gives it ideal camouflage when a potential predator tries to seek it out amongst the leaves of a native plant.