Quizzes & Puzzles14 mins ago
can anyone explain this rainbow effect?
http://tinypic.com/r/34pmjrl/5 (fingers crossed for that!)
so, the sun is setting to the right, but to the left there's a pit of a prism in the sky, like a rainbow. it wasn't raining, and anyway.. rainbows are opposite the sun, if you know what I mean!
this was the best pic I got, but the colours were quite vivid for about 10 minutes.
it was very strange.. any ideas please?
so, the sun is setting to the right, but to the left there's a pit of a prism in the sky, like a rainbow. it wasn't raining, and anyway.. rainbows are opposite the sun, if you know what I mean!
this was the best pic I got, but the colours were quite vivid for about 10 minutes.
it was very strange.. any ideas please?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by sara3. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's a phenomenon known as mock sun, basically the sun's rays are refracted in the upper cloud layers splitting white light into the spectral colours, the upper cloud layers are made of ice crystals which act like the prisms you used in secondary school science. The sun in the right condition can form a complete circle of mock sun, mocks at the four cardinal points with a full luminous ring as the circumference. The FULL Circle is best seen in the polar regions
Couple of of brilliant images at
http://www.strangestr...th-dimension-sun.html
Couple of of brilliant images at
http://www.strangestr...th-dimension-sun.html
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Sara....should sound right..otherwise I'm in the wrong job ;-) I have a couple of full halo images at home, if i remember I'll dig them out and post them, The were taken in the Antarctic
Sherrarddk - Multiple rainbows are pretty regular and happen when the light is reflected twice inside the rain droplets rather than once, the starts to reflect at slightly different angles which creates the double. When you see two rainbows there is a dark band call Alexanders Band between them (Alexander of Aphrodisias, yep honest, first described the phenomenon) and the colours of the outer, dimmer, band will be inverted. This can continue and up to four or five rainbows have been seen each becoming dimmer and dimmer as you increase the numbers of arcs.....Now a monochrome rainbow is much more exciting
Sherrarddk - Multiple rainbows are pretty regular and happen when the light is reflected twice inside the rain droplets rather than once, the starts to reflect at slightly different angles which creates the double. When you see two rainbows there is a dark band call Alexanders Band between them (Alexander of Aphrodisias, yep honest, first described the phenomenon) and the colours of the outer, dimmer, band will be inverted. This can continue and up to four or five rainbows have been seen each becoming dimmer and dimmer as you increase the numbers of arcs.....Now a monochrome rainbow is much more exciting
-- answer removed --
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