from my experence i think it is water because it only happens after rain and during sunny days and you put your house to mist you can see the rainbow
The prism that makes a rainbow is actually millions of tiny water droplets or ice crystals in the air acting as a type of natural prism. These droplets or crystals refract and reflect sunlight, separating it into its various colors and creating the beautiful arc of colors we see in the sky.
It is less likely to see a rainbow at noon because the sun needs to be low in the sky, around 42 degrees or lower, for the sunlight to produce a rainbow in the opposite direction. However, it is technically possible if specific conditions align, such as during winter when the sun is lower in the sky or in tropical regions.
The rainbow is almost always in the day sky, produced by sunlight. Very rarely, one can appear in the night sky, produced by moonlight.
a rainbow is not shaped like a arc its a circle
A rainbow is formed by light passing through a prism (the prism being a raindrop) and then different colours going through the prism at different speeds, light is made up of about 6 colours: Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue and v some colours of light are generally faster that others, red being the fastest travelling colour and violet being the slowest. This means that rainbows always have the same order of colour. A double rainbow is simply when there is two sources of light, and the second source travells through a different raindrop, causing a second rainbow.
Water droplets in the sky after a storm.
Yes, a rainbow is caused by sunlight refracting, reflecting, and dispersing within raindrops. The water acts like a prism that separates the sunlight into its different colors, creating the colorful arc that we see in the sky.
When sunlight passes through raindrops, the rain drops act like a glass prism. The sunlight is split into the rainbow colours in the sky, and a rainbow appears.
A rainbow gets its colors due to the dispersion of sunlight by raindrops in the atmosphere. Each color in a rainbow corresponds to a different wavelength of light being refracted at slightly different angles, creating the spectrum of colors we see.
Basically, a bank of water droplets reflect light back to you. The sunlight from different areas reflects back at different angles, thus causing the "prism" different color effect.
The prism that makes a rainbow is actually millions of tiny water droplets or ice crystals in the air acting as a type of natural prism. These droplets or crystals refract and reflect sunlight, separating it into its various colors and creating the beautiful arc of colors we see in the sky.
Apparently, a rainbow appears in the sky because both, rain and sun, mix together and produce light and colours. Some people belive that at the end of a rainbow is gold. But how does the gold just appear suddenly?
When light shines through a prism, it is refracted and dispersed into its component colors, creating a spectrum known as a rainbow. This happens because each color of light has a different wavelength and is bent at a different angle. The resulting spectrum shows the colors of the rainbow from red to violet.
Rainbows are arcs of spectral colors created when white light is separated into red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet light. This occurs when the light is filtered through a prism. Raindrops and mist act as prisms for sunlight and created what we call rainbows in the sky. Note a prism caused "refraction" and that is the term that makes the rainbow a rainbow!
If it is sunny after the rain has stopped, you are likely to see a rainbow in the sky.
You can see a rainbow in puddles because the water acts as a reflective surface, causing light to refract and disperse into its component colors. When sunlight hits water droplets in the air, it creates a similar effect, producing a rainbow in the sky.
In the sky