A purely scientific answer is that there are no more colours beyond what you see in a rainbow. The rainbow constitutes the visible spectrum, meaning that it is the only part of the electromagnetic spectrum that is visible to the human eye as light.
Beyond the red 'end' of the spectrum is Infra Red Radiation and beyond the violet 'end' is Ultra-Violet and beyond that X-rays. There is a Wikipedia article about the electromagnetic spectrum here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetic_spectrum
draw a rainbow and fill the suitable colors.
A rainbow forms in the sky when sunlight is refracted, or bent, by raindrops in the atmosphere. The sunlight is split into its different colors, creating the arc of colors that we see in a rainbow.
A rainbow is made when sunlight is refracted, or bent, by raindrops in the atmosphere. This refraction causes the sunlight to separate into its different colors, creating the arc of colors that we see in the sky.
There are 7 colors in the rainbow. There is an easy way to remember them:ROY-G-BIVRedOrangeYellowGreenBlueIndigoViolet
No, the amount of moisture in the air does not affect the order of colors in a rainbow. The colors in a rainbow (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet) are always seen in the same order because of the way light is refracted and reflected within water droplets to create a rainbow.
Yes, colors beyond the rainbow shades exist. The rainbow displays the colors of the visible spectrum, but there are many more colors that can be perceived by the human eye, including shades such as pink, brown, black, and gray.
No, the colors of the rainbow follow a specific order that begins with red at the top and ends with violet at the bottom. Reversing the order would not be considered the traditional rainbow colors.
Good question! There are seven main colours of a rainbow, but where they intercept, you get a range of thousands of colours, some beyond our capability of measuring.
Yes, the invisible spectrum includes wavelengths beyond what our eyes can detect, such as ultraviolet and infrared light. These wavelengths do not correspond to the colors of the rainbow that we can see with our eyes.
If I'm not mistaking, but I believe there are 7 colors on a Rainbow.
Beyond the Rainbow was created on 1922-02-19.
No, sunlight contains only three frequencies that appear together as white light
the primary colors of the rainbow are red blue and yellow
Generally no. It is possible to have multiple colored feces, but generally not in all the colors of the rainbow. You might do some that is green that ends up brown, but you wouldn't likely have more than 3 different colors per bowel movement.
a rainbow
no.
Beyond the Black Rainbow was released on 05/18/2012.