Crosswords7 mins ago
Snowbows?
14 Answers
We all know and love rainbows, and most of us probably know how they are produced - but is there such a thing as a snowbow? Or does the opacity of falling snow prevent the refraction of light through it?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.here's a snowbow
http:// www.fre eride.s .../201 0/12/IM G_4905. jpg
A couple of years a go I saw a moonbow which are rare and supposedly lucky, I did the lottery but nothing has happened yet.
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A couple of years a go I saw a moonbow which are rare and supposedly lucky, I did the lottery but nothing has happened yet.
The closest thing to a 'snowbow' is a 'sun dog'. These are rainbow coloured vertical bands either side of the sun which occurr when sunlight is refracted through vertically orientated ice crystals. They are called 'sun dogs' because they 'dog' the sun.
http:// www.goo gle.co. ...25TU M62MKq8 0QW45oH YDg
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I suspect you're right jomifl,melting snowflakes would be the obvious answer. The moonbow I saw is of course created the same way as a rainbow except the light is reflected off the moon.
Incidently when I first saw it I checked the internet, where it stated there are only two places in the western hemisphere where they can be seen,South Africa and Kentucky. Well they're wrong, I saw mine in Northern Ireland !!
Incidently when I first saw it I checked the internet, where it stated there are only two places in the western hemisphere where they can be seen,South Africa and Kentucky. Well they're wrong, I saw mine in Northern Ireland !!
yeah I agree Sundogs - or parhelion
see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_dogs
and also, same article
Wars of the Roses
"The prelude to the Battle of Mortimer's Cross in Herefordshire, England in 1461 is supposed to have involved the appearance of a complete parhelion with three "suns". The Yorkist commander, later Edward IV, convinced his initially frightened troops that it represented the Holy Trinity and Edward's troops won a decisive victory. The event was dramatized by William Shakespeare in King Henry VI, Part 3.[8]"
also hey say, the first speech in Rich III - currently playing in a Leicster supermarket car park - Now is the winter of my discontent made glorious summer.....this glorious sun of York...etc.etc
also refers to the same thing
see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_dogs
and also, same article
Wars of the Roses
"The prelude to the Battle of Mortimer's Cross in Herefordshire, England in 1461 is supposed to have involved the appearance of a complete parhelion with three "suns". The Yorkist commander, later Edward IV, convinced his initially frightened troops that it represented the Holy Trinity and Edward's troops won a decisive victory. The event was dramatized by William Shakespeare in King Henry VI, Part 3.[8]"
also hey say, the first speech in Rich III - currently playing in a Leicster supermarket car park - Now is the winter of my discontent made glorious summer.....this glorious sun of York...etc.etc
also refers to the same thing
Halo/s are sometimes referred to as an 'icebow' - http:// en.wiki pedia.o ..._(op tical_p henomen on)