What causes blue streaks in the sky that resemble blue rainbows?
Blue streaks in the sky resembling blue rainbows can be caused by a phenomenon called cloud iridescence. This occurs when water droplets or ice crystals in the atmosphere scatter sunlight or moonlight, creating the appearance of colorful streaks or bands. The blue color may be due to the scattering of light by smaller water droplets.
A rainbow is curved due to angle requirements. Light from the sun that
bounces through a drop of water, comes into your eye, and appears red must
bounce at a specific angle. Join two sticks together at a set angle. Place
one end at a dot to represent the sun. Place the other toward your eye.
The place where the sticks join, where the water drop is, can be rotated
around in a circle. A rainbow is shaped like a circle.
You never see the entire rainbow because of the horizon. When you look at a
rainbow, the Earth gets in the way of most of the circle. The portion you
see is just the top portion. Draw a circle and cover a little more than
half of it. What is left is the shape of a rainbow.
Rainbows are created by sunlight striking billions of tiny droplets of water in the atmosphere, usually after a rain, but any source of fine water spray can create a rainbow.
Rainbows are caused by the reflection and refraction of sunlight through water droplets in the atmosphere. The water droplets act as individual refractors and reflectors that "split" (refract) the light into the respective colors of the rainbow. The refracted light is reflected off the back surface of the individual rain drops and to the observer.
The physics of the process is the same as the physics behind a prism, i.e. refraction breaks up white light into colors as it passes through a prism. With water droplets, refraction occurs but it is complicated because the droplets are spheres and the light has to reflect from the droplet as well. Nonetheless, the rainbow after a rain is a result based on the principle of a prism.
A rainbow is formed when sunlight passes through a light rainstorm.
The conditions for seeing a rainbow are that the sun be shining in one part of the sky, and that water droplets in a cloud or in falling rain be on the other side. To view a rainbow you need to be at a 42 degree angle. Light is dissipated by the water drops which act as small prisms, the colors refract into the air particles.
When the sun's rays refract light through millions of raindrop's color apears on the horizon, known as a rainbow.
A very good question. Rainbows, simply put, are the end result of white light being factured into several colors. "Now how does this work?" you ask. Well, let's go back and figure out what white light is. According to science, the colors we see are merely reflections of certain wavelengths of light. Every object absorbs light, taking in all of its color. The color that isn't absorbed is what is reflected into our eyes, thus giving the appearance we see. White is a unique color. Contrary to what it looks like, the color white is actually the sum of all colors combined. So, what does this have to do with a rainbow? Have you heard of a prism? Prisms are transparent objects with flat surfaces and refract light. They're often made of glass and can be found in science classes or little fun shops. What happens with a prism is that the white light shining into it is broken up into individual wavelengths of light. The end result: a rainbow. Now, let's go back to the rainbows we see in the sky. They work the same way, only with water. We often times see rainbows at the end of a rain because the rain clouds move away, allowing light to shine down. This light shines through the light mist that is left behind or moving away with the clouds, producing a prism effect. Cool, huh? Did you know that Pink Floyd used a prism on a widely known album cover? ~Apple Juice
Rainbows are caused by the reflection and refraction of sunlight in millions of raindrops.
The Sun must be behind the observer and fairly low for a rainbow to occur. This is why they're seldom seen in the middle of the day. Sometimes, if the light has been reflected twice inside each raindrop, a second fainter rainbow can be seen about 9 degrees outside the first. The colors on the outside one are reversed in order, red being in the inside. A third rainbow is occasionally seen and fourth rainbow is almost on top of the first so it is often not recognized.
A rainbow is actually a spectacular natural optical phenomenon. Individual raindrops act like tiny prisms, splitting the white light from the Sun (or other white light source) into a continuum of different hues, from deep violet to deep red. From any given point BETWEEN the Sun and the rain droplets, a single droplet would appear to refract a tiny speck of light in one particular hue, depending on its position. However, billions of raindrops combine their refractions to form the whole image, a circular arc containing a complete range of colors.
If one were to draw a straight line from the Sun to the Observer, then project that line straight along, it ALWAYS points to the very center of the arc formed by the rainbow. (Since the ground usually interferes with a complete image, one almost always sees just an arc. At higher altitudes, however, the arc continues farther around to form a circle.)
The colors of the primary rainbow are always the same - starting from the outside: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet.
The reason that it is IMPOSSIBLE to "approach" one end of the rainbow is that the rainbow phenomenon simply recedes as the viewer travels toward it. If you use a garden hose to spray fine droplets you can see the entire circle of "rainbow" just a few feet away. A it is a circle there is no "end" to the rainbow.
When the sun is out (and preferably low near the horizon) and it is raining a rainbow occurs as the rays of the sun refract in and reflect from raindrops. Look away from the Sun when it is raining in that direction - away from the Sun - and you can often see 1, 2 or rarely even more rainbows centered around the "anti-solar point" (the shadow of your head).
Answer 1:
A rainbow is curved because of the way that light shines - it forms into a curved shape.
Answer 2:
A rainbow is curved because the light that makes it up comes through the atmosphere
which is curved around the planet, it includes every colour of the light spectrum.
Answer #3:
A rainbow is curved because at every point on the rainbow, the angle between the
line to the sun and the line to you has to be 42 degrees ... at any other angle, the
light leaving the water droplet misses you and you don't see it.
A great number of points where that angle is true form a circle.
(Of course, only the ones that are above the ground can participate in the process.
The ones that are underground either can't see the sun or can't see you, and there's
probably no water droplets there anyway, so there's no path for the light to go from
the sun to the point underground and then to you, and you don't see a full circle.)
Sunlight is made up of the colours of the rainbow, though we don't normally see the separate colours. When sunlight passes through raindrops in the sky, the raindrops can act like a clear glass prism. This prism effect splits the sunlight into the colours we see in a rainbow.
What does the phrase 'chasing rainbows' mean?
The phrase 'chasing rainbows' is often used to describe an unrealistic pursuit of something that is unattainable or unlikely to happen. It implies chasing after an elusive goal or an impossible dream.
The first meaning of tangible is that you can touch it. You can't touch a rainbow. It is an optical effect, caused by the splitting of light rays into different frequencies of light. If you move, the rainbow moves.
The second meaning of tangible is something that is definite; clearly intelligible; not illusive. In the sense that rainbows are definite, i.e. definable and real, then, in that respect they certainly are tangible.
But you still can't touch one!
However, you could be touched by a rainbow, in the sense that seeing a rainbow has often touched the heart/feelings of an observer!
Is rainbow a natural resource?
It's 'natural' alright, but I don't think that it would be called a 'resource', because
you can't do anything with it and it doesn't supply us with anything, unless you
want to count beauty, wonder, inspiration, and contemplation.
Where did they get the name rainbow?
The name "rainbow" comes from the Latin word "radius" which means "ray" or "beam of light." Rainbows are formed when sunlight shines through rain droplets in the atmosphere, refracting or bending the light and creating a spectrum of colors.
What are the uses for a rainbow?
A rainbow is a natural phenomenon caused by the refraction and dispersion of sunlight in raindrops. While not serving a specific practical purpose, rainbows are often appreciated for their beauty and symbolism in various cultures as a symbol of hope, peace, and diversity. Photographers and artists may also use rainbows in their work to create aesthetically pleasing imagery.
Is a rainbow got gold at the end of rainbow?
No .The mythology associated with a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow was perpetuated by the Leprechaun's themselves. Back around 6000 years ago a Leprechaun from what is now know as West Cork in Ireland was captured by a Celt who refused to let him go unless he was told where the Leprechauns kept their gold.
The Leprechauns companions created a false trail and hid a small amount of gold at a point where through their magical qualities they created a Rainbow without sun or rain -he end of which fell at the point where the gold was buried.
When the Celt began to dig he came across a small piece of gold and is excitement he let the Leprechaun go. This started the myth and it passed down through the generations So its true to say wherever you see a rainbow now that there is no pot of gold of it. In fact the gold is anywhere except there and thats what keeps it safe.
We see rainbows when the sun is behind us and falling rain is in front of us.
When sunlight strikes a falling drop of water it is refracted, changed indirection, by the surface of the water.
The light continues into the drop and is reflected from the back of the drop to the front. When the beam hits the front it is refracted again and emerges from the drop as the color spectrum that we see in a rainbow.
The water drop acts like a prism to separate the light into its different wave lengths.
Can you get to the end of the rainbow?
The closest I ever got was when I had one in my back yard However you cant get to the end of a rain bow because if you get too close your point of view changes to a degree where it becomes invisible to you.
In the literal sense, no you can't. a rainbow is simply drops of water in the sky that reflect sunlight to make different spectrums of light. it has no technical beginning or end. Metaphorically, the end of the rainbow could be a successful life or a good retirement, which is possible to get to
How many colors are on a rainbow?
Answer #1:
The main colors are:
Red
Orange
Yellow
Green
Blue or Indigo
Violet (not purple)
There are seven colors in the rainbow and can be remembered by the mnemonic device Roy G. Biv: Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo and Violet.
An easier way of remembering the seven colours of the rainbow is by this expression: "Richard Of York Gave Battle In Vain."
However, indigo is not considered a part of the color spectrum. That was added because an early researcher assumed there were 7 different natural colors like there are 7 different music notes in a key.
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Answer #2:
The rainbow has ALL of the colors ... every color of cloth, paint, hair, paper, stone, or animal that ever existed. Every color that the any eye has ever seen, or CAN see, is in the rainbow. There are millions of them. Many have names, but most don't.
What three changes does a light undergo when it reacts with a rain drop from a rainbow?
What are the colors that form the other rainbow colors?
Red, Yellow & blue are primary so no colors make up them.
Green=Yellow+Blue
Violet=Blue+Red
Indigo=Violet+Blue
What feature of waves causes a rainbow?
The refraction and dispersion of light through water droplets in the atmosphere causes the formation of a rainbow. When sunlight enters a water droplet, it is both refracted (bent) and dispersed (separated into its color components) before being reflected internally and then refracted again as it exits the droplet, creating the arc of colors we see as a rainbow.
How are rainbows formed using dispersion refraction and reflexion in the answer?
Rainbows are formed when sunlight is refracted as it enters a raindrop, then internally reflects off the back of the drop, and finally exits through refraction. This process separates the sunlight into its individual colors due to dispersion, creating the arc of colors that we see in a rainbow.
What is created when an object blocks the light?
If the light is strong enough, a shadow is formed. But if that object is a cloud, a rainbow may be formed.
How are rainbows and refraction related?
Rainbows are produced by the refraction, dispersion, and reflection of sunlight in water droplets in the atmosphere. When sunlight enters a water droplet, it is refracted, dispersed into its component colors, and then reflected internally before exiting the droplet. This process creates the colorful arc of a rainbow that we see in the sky.
Do rainbows form when something vibrates?
Rainbows form when sunlight is refracted and reflected in water droplets in the atmosphere. Vibrations alone do not cause rainbows to form.
What is the colers of the rainbow?
The rainbow colors are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet.