Rainbow
A rainbow is a meteorological phenomenon that is caused by reflection, refraction and dispersion of light in water droplets resulting in a spectrum of light appearing in the sky. It takes the form of a multicoloured
circular arc. Rainbows caused by
sunlight always appear in the section of the sky directly opposite the sun.
Rainbows can be full circles. However, the observer
normally sees only an arc formed by illuminated droplets above the ground, and
centred on a line from the sun to the observer's eye.
In a primary rainbow, the arc shows red on the outer part
and violet on the inner side. This rainbow is caused by light being refracted when entering a droplet of water, then reflected inside on the back
of the droplet and refracted again when leaving it.
In a double rainbow, a second arc is seen outside the
primary arc and has the order of its colours reversed, with red on the inner
side of the arc. This is caused by the light being reflected twice on the
inside of the droplet before leaving it.
A rainbow is not located at a specific distance from the
observer but comes from an optical illusion caused by any water droplets
viewed from a certain angle relative to a light source. Thus, a rainbow is not
an object and cannot be physically approached. Indeed, it is impossible for an
observer to see a rainbow from water droplets at any angle other than the
customary one of 42 degrees from the direction opposite the light source. Even
if an observer sees another observer who seems "under" or "at the
end of" a rainbow, the second observer will see a different
rainbow—farther off—at the same angle as seen by the first observer.
Rainbows span a continuous spectrum of colours. Any
distinct bands perceived are an artefact of human colour
vision, and no banding of any type is seen in a black-and-white
photo of a rainbow, only a smooth gradation of intensity to a maximum, then
fading towards the other side. For colours seen by the human eye, the most
commonly cited and remembered sequence is Isaac
Newton's sevenfold red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet, remembered by the mnemonic Richard Of York Gave Battle In Vain (ROYGBIV).
Rainbows can be caused by many forms of airborne water.
These include not only rain, but also mist, spray, and airborne dew.
Visibility
Rainbows can be observed whenever there are water drops in the air and sunlight shining from behind the observer at a low altitude angle. Because of this, rainbows are usually seen in the western sky during the morning and in the eastern sky during the early evening. The most spectacular rainbow displays happen when half the sky is still dark with raining clouds and the observer is at a spot with a clear sky in the direction of the sun. The result is a luminous rainbow that contrasts with the darkened background. During such good visibility conditions, the larger but fainter secondary rainbow is often visible. It appears about 10° outside of the primary rainbow, with an inverse order of colours.
The rainbow effect is also commonly seen near waterfalls
or fountains. In addition, the effect can be artificially created by dispersing
water droplets into the air on a sunny day. Rarely, a moonbow, lunar
rainbow or nighttime rainbow, can be seen on strongly moonlit nights. As
human visual perception for
colour is poor in low light, moonbows are often perceived to be white.
It is difficult to photograph the complete semicircle of
a rainbow in one frame, as this would require an angle
of view of 84°. For a 35 mm camera, a wide-angle lens with
a focal length of 19 mm or less would be
required. Now that software for stitching several images into a panorama is
available, images of the entire arc and even secondary arcs can be created
fairly easily from a series of overlapping frames.
From above the earth such as in an aeroplane, it is
sometimes possible to see a rainbow as a full circle. This phenomenon can be confused with the glory phenomenon, but glory is usually much smaller, covering only 5–20°.
The sky inside a primary rainbow is brighter than the sky
outside of the bow. This is because each raindrop is a sphere and it scatters
light over an entire circular disc in the sky. The radius of the disc depends
on the wavelength of light, with red light being scattered over a larger angle
than blue light. Over most of the disc, scattered light at all wavelengths
overlaps, resulting in white light which brightens the sky. At the edge, the
wavelength dependence of the scattering gives rise to the rainbow.
Light of primary rainbow arc is 96% polarised tangential to the arch. The light of the second arc is 90% polarised.
Number of colours in a spectrum or a
rainbow
A spectrum obtained
using a glass prism and a point source is a continuum of wavelengths without
bands. The number of colours that the human eye is able to distinguish in a
spectrum is in the order of 100. Accordingly, the Munsell
colour system (a 20th-century system for
numerically describing colours, based on equal steps for human visual
perception) distinguishes 100 hues. The apparent discreteness of main colours
is an artefact of human perception and the exact number of main colours is a
somewhat arbitrary choice.
Newton, who admitted his eyes were not very critical in
distinguishing colours, originally (1672) divided the spectrum into five
main colours: red, yellow, green, blue and violet. Later he included orange and
indigo, giving seven main colours by analogy to the number of notes in a
musical scale. Newton chose to divide the visible spectrum into seven
colours out of a belief derived from the beliefs of the ancient
Greek sophists,
who thought there was a connection between the colours, the musical notes, the
known objects in the Solar System,
and the days of the week. Scholars have noted that what Newton regarded at
the time as "blue" would today be regarded as cyan, and what Newton
called "indigo" would today be considered blue.
The colour pattern of a rainbow is different from a
spectrum, and the colours are less saturated. There is spectral smearing in a
rainbow owing to the fact that for any particular wavelength, there is a distribution
of exit angles, rather than a single unvarying angle. In addition, a
rainbow is a blurred version of the bow obtained from a point source, because
the disk diameter of the sun (0.5°) cannot be neglected compared to the width
of a rainbow (2°). Further red of the first supplementary rainbow overlaps the
violet of the primary rainbow, so rather than the final colour being a variant
of spectral violet, it is actually a purple. The number of colour bands of a
rainbow may therefore be different from the number of bands in a spectrum,
especially if the droplets are particularly large or small. Therefore, the
number of colours of a rainbow is variable. If, however, the word rainbow is
used inaccurately to mean spectrum, it is the number of main
colours in the spectrum.
The question of whether everyone sees seven colours in a
rainbow is related to the idea of linguistic relativity. Suggestions have been made that there is universality in the way that a
rainbow is perceived. However, more recent research suggests that the
number of distinct colours observed and what these are called depend on the
language that one uses, with people whose language has fewer colour words
seeing fewer discrete colour bands.
Explanation
When sunlight encounters a raindrop, part of the light is
reflected and the rest enters the raindrop. The light is refracted at the surface of the raindrop. When this light hits the back of the
raindrop, some of it is reflected off the back. When the internally reflected
light reaches the surface again, once more some is internally reflected and
some are refracted as it exits the drop. (The light that reflects off the drop,
exits from the back, or continues to bounce around inside the drop after the
second encounter with the surface, is not relevant to the formation of the
primary rainbow.) The overall effect is that part of the incoming light is
reflected back over the range of 0° to 42°, with the most intense light at 42°. This
angle is independent of the size of the drop but does depend on its refractive
index. Seawater has a higher refractive index than rainwater,
so the radius of a "rainbow" in sea spray is smaller than a true
rainbow. This is visible to the naked eye by a misalignment of these bows.
The reason the returning light is most intense at about
42° is a turning point – the light hitting the outermost ring of the
drop gets returned at less than 42°, as does the light hitting the drop nearer
to its centre. There is a circular band of light that all gets returned right
around 42°. If the sun were a laser emitting parallel, monochromatic rays, then
the luminance (brightness)
of the bow would tend toward infinity at this angle (ignoring interference
effects). (See Caustic (optics).)
But since the sun's luminance is finite and its rays are not all parallel (it
covers about half a degree of the sky) the luminance does not go to infinity.
Furthermore, the amount by which light is refracted depends upon its wavelength, and hence it's colour. This effect is called dispersion. Blue light (shorter wavelength) is refracted at a greater angle than red
light, but due to the reflection of light rays from the back of the droplet,
the blue light emerges from the droplet at a smaller angle to the original
incident white light ray than the red light. Due to this angle, blue is seen on
the inside of the arc of the primary rainbow, and red on the outside. The
result of this is not only to give different colours to different parts of the
rainbow but also to diminish the brightness. (A "rainbow" formed by
droplets of a liquid with no dispersion would be white, but brighter than a
normal rainbow.)
The light at the back of the raindrop does not
undergo total internal reflection, and some light does emerge from the back. However, light coming out the
back of the raindrop does not create a rainbow between the observer and the sun
because spectra emitted from the back of the raindrop do not have a maximum of
intensity, as the other visible rainbows do, and thus the colours blend
together rather than forming a rainbow.
A rainbow does not exist at one particular location. Many
rainbows exist; however, only one can be seen depending on the particular
observer's viewpoint as droplets of light illuminated by the sun. All raindrops
refract and reflect the sunlight in the same way, but only the light from some
raindrops reaches the observer's eye. This light is what constitutes the rainbow
for that observer. The whole system is composed of the sun's rays, the observer's
head, and the (spherical) water drops that have an axial
symmetry around the axis through the
observer's head and parallel to the sun's rays. The rainbow is curved because
the set of all the raindrops that have the right angle between the observer,
the drop, and the sun, lie on a cone pointing
at the sun with the observer at the tip. The base of the cone forms a circle at
an angle of 40–42° to the line between the observer's head and their shadow but
50% or more of the circle is below the horizon unless the observer is
sufficiently far above the earth's surface to see it all, for example in an
aeroplane (see above). Alternatively, an observer with the right vantage
point may see the full circle in a fountain or waterfall spray.
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