No. However, I saw some of them mixed in a little
The traditional colors of a rainbow are red, orange, yellow green, blue, indigo,and violet but you see them in a rainbow very rarely. you usally only see red,yellow, orange, blue, and violet if ur lucky.=======================================Answer #2:Tehnically, ALL of the colors that anyone has ever seen,or is capable of ever seeing, are in the rainbow.
There are no known colors that no one has ever seen. Different cultures may have different ways of perceiving and describing colors, but the visible light spectrum encompasses all colors that the human eye can potentially see.
Yes, Red Orange Yellow Green Blue Indigo Violet, not in any particular order.==========================Another answer:Unfortunately, the first answer was posted by an unlucky soul who apparentlynever saw a rainbow.First of all, there definitely is a particular order. There has never been a rainbowin which the seven colors on that list did not appear in that exact order.And plus, those are not the only 7 colors in the rainbow. The truth is that everycolor that you or anybody else ever saw, every color of paint that was ever mixedat the hardware store, and every shade of dye that a fabric was ever soaked in,is in the rainbow.Next time you see one, look closely, and see if you can find the exact spot whereorange ends and yellow begins.
Because "color" is an interaction between the visible light portion of theelectromagnetic spectrum and the light sensitive parts of our eyes.Our eyes have evolved 4 different receptors--one each for Red, Green andBlue and another for violet.A rainbow actually contains millions of colors, but we have evolved tocategorize most of the wavelengths in the visible spectrum as one of theprimary colors and their combinations.A rainbow is merely a large band of parallel stripes, blended at the rims, whichdisplays the full spectrum of colors that make up the sun's white light. Thisbrilliant display appears to the naked eye when the sun's light breaks up as itpasses through, the prism-like raindrops during a rain-shower.This immense, curved spectrum of light appears only when both the elementsof sunshine and rainfall present. As the sunlight enters the falling raindrops, itbreaks up into its true colors of red, orange, yellow, blue, and violet. Thesecolors are always arranged according to their wavelengths, with red being atone end of the spectrum, and violet at the other. Once inside the droplet, theparticles of colored light bounce from side to side, reflect off of the far side ofthe droplet, exit the droplet, and reassemble, according to their wavelengths,to form a rainbow.Simply because you happen to be in the right place at the right time, whenboth elements necessary to form a rainbow are present, does not mean thatyou will actually see one. For the human eye to see these multi-colored bands,ranging from red to violet, his body must be strategically positioned betweenthe sun and the rain, with his back to the sun.If the sun, the eye, and the center of the rainbow's arc are not in a straightline, the show is over, before it began. This explains why we only see rainbowsin the early morning or late afternoon…it is physically impossible for us to alignour eyes with the sun at other times of day, as it is high above our heads!Logically, a morning rainbow appears when the sun shines in the east, and therain falls in the west, and an afternoon rainbow appears when the sun shines inthe west, and the rain falls in the east. If lucky, and a bit superstitious, andyou do find a pot of gold somewhere over the rainbow, please let us know.After all, we gave you the directions!Those are the 7 main colors of the light spectrum.===================================Answer #2:They don't. Rainbows have ALL of the colors. Every shade of fabric ever dyed,every nuance of paint ever mixed, every hue ever perceived by the eye of ahuman or any other creature, they're ALL in the rainbow. A huge number of themhave been given names, an even larger number have no names.But a topic that involves infinities is a bit much to handle in the second grade,when it's time to start talking about rainbows. So seven colors were selected,that span the rainbow from end to end, are easy to see in it, and have namesfamiliar to young children just learning their colors, and that's the way the rainbow is taught.
white lights is all colors equal. look through a prism at tube you will see rainbow effect. white paper reflects all light, while black absorbs all colors. if paper is green it will asorb all colors but green which is reflected back to eye. what ever color you see something are the color(s) it reflects.
Most likely not, since the rainbow contains everypossible color that the human eye can detect.
Yes, those seven colors are all in the rainbow. So are all of the other colors that you or anyone else has ever seen.
The traditional colors of a rainbow are red, orange, yellow green, blue, indigo,and violet but you see them in a rainbow very rarely. you usally only see red,yellow, orange, blue, and violet if ur lucky.=======================================Answer #2:Tehnically, ALL of the colors that anyone has ever seen,or is capable of ever seeing, are in the rainbow.
Do you mean will he ever be able to see color? If that is your question, then yes. The Giver passes the memory of Rainbow to Jonas, so that he can receive all the different colors.
No. The moon reflects light from the sun. The light reaches the Earth through the atmosphere. If the atmosphere contains particles, dust, or water vapour, the moon may appear slightly different from normal but unfortunately, not rainbow.
Yes.
Red0rangeYellowGreenBlueIndigoViolet===================Answer #2:Every color of paint that was ever mixed, ever color of fabric that was ever dyed orwoven, every color of every flower that ever grew, every color that can be observedin a high-quality monitor, HDTV, soap-bubble or oil-spill, and every color that you oranybody else ever saw, is in the rainbow.
no becuz rainbows can keep goin i dnt think they ever stop
No. The rainbow is always a circle with an apparent diameter of about 85 degrees.It's never in the direction you're moving, and if you ever got there, you'd find thatthere is no there there.
Traditionally, seven. Red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet. Those arethe main colours. There are possibly over 300 colours in the rainbow, since they allblend into each other, so each different shade is a colour.================================Answer #2:All of them are ... every color that anyone has ever seen, or that can be seen.There's no limit to the number.
My cousin did. It was amazing and very colorful, very festive.
sir isaac newton =========================== Have you ever actually LOOKED at a rainbow ? Did you see seven 'distinct' colors ? Or did you see a continuous spread of every color that the human eye can see and the brain can distinguish ?