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.
When you see a rainbow, you can enjoy its beauty and take a moment to appreciate the natural phenomenon.
light is white. if you mix the colors of the rainbow you get white. A prism separates the colors, showing a rainbow.
No, the end of a rainbow is an optical illusion and cannot be physically reached or located.
A rainbow is formed when sunlight is refracted, or bent, while passing through raindrops in the atmosphere. This refraction causes the white light to separate into its component colors, creating a spectrum of colors in the sky that we perceive as a rainbow.
It is very rare to see the end of a rainbow because rainbows are formed by sunlight reflecting and refracting through raindrops, creating a circular arc in the sky. The end of a rainbow appears to move as you move, so it is impossible to reach or see it from a fixed point on the ground.
The moisture in the air caused by the rain reflect sunlight which creates a prism, so it reflects the colors from the light. Light is actually a rainbow, that's why sometimes the ground is rainbow colored when light is shining through a window. Also when you look in puddles, sometimes you can see rainbows.
You see a rainbow because you want to, and you do because you feel like it.
No, as you move the rainbow you see moves too. No, because the bit of the rainbow you see is part of a circle and circles have no end. However, you can direct someone else to the place where YOU see the end of your rainbow (but THEY will not see it when they get there).
There is no color your eye can see that is not in the rainbow.
There is no color your eye can see that is not in the rainbow.
No, different people may see slightly different rainbows depending on their viewing angle and distance from the rainbow. Each person's perspective will affect the portion of the rainbow they are able to see.
Heat-induced mirage.
No. In order to see a rainbow in front of you, there must be a source of light behind you, and the rainbow you see will only have the colors of the source in it.
One doesn't have to be at any specific angle to see a rainbow. What is Dependent on seeing the rainbow is the location of the rain, and sun relative to you. The sun is always behind a rainbow when seen. So you would be in front of the rainbow, rain, and the sun. Also, No two people see the same rainbow unless a picture or video was taken of the rainbow.
When you see a rainbow, you can enjoy its beauty and take a moment to appreciate the natural phenomenon.
A rainbow is a circle. What we see from almost any point on earth is a semicircle, or just a part of the rainbow. We can only see it from horizon to horizon, or just an arc of the whole rainbow. Occasionally we can see a full circle of a rainbow in the sky surrounding the sun, and sometimes multiple ones.
Well you see, your really asking two questions there. One takes me back to 1967 where i had a motocycle and a kitten named Puddles. Puddles like the wet and swam in puddles. The second question takes me to OUNCE OUNCE