Rainbows form when bright sunlight hits rain that is still falling at just the right angle. Usually, this is right after a storm has passed.
Yeah... The thunderstorm caused the power to go out. The thunderstorm startled the dog. The weatherman warned that a thunderstorm was on its way.
Rainbows form when sunlight is refracted, dispersed, and reflected inside raindrops in the atmosphere, creating a spectrum of colors. This usually occurs during or after a rain shower when the sun is shining.
Mid-morning if there's moisture
Ibn al-Haytham, a Persian scientist in the 11th century, was one of the first to study rainbows. He wrote a detailed explanation of how rainbows form and provided a systematic explanation based on principles of optics.
Depends when the rain ends
Rainbows form when sunlight is refracted and reflected in water droplets in the atmosphere. Vibrations alone do not cause rainbows to form.
Rainbows
Humans.
Rainbows form in the sky when sunlight is refracted, or bent, by raindrops in the atmosphere, causing the light to separate into its different colors.
rainbow form by the sunlight after the rain
Yes, rainbows can form in any place
Because only the the energy involved in a thunderstorm or developing thunderstorm is enough to form something as strong as a tornado.
The entire thunderstorm is a cumulonimbus cloud.
No. A supercell is a type of thunderstorm. Most thunderstorms are not supercells.
Sometimes. Hope this helps!
Yeah... The thunderstorm caused the power to go out. The thunderstorm startled the dog. The weatherman warned that a thunderstorm was on its way.
Rainbows do not usually form after a snow storm