Monochrome Rainbows: In The Right Circumstances, Rainbows Can Look Very Strange Indeed

0
1K

Monochrome Rainbows: In The Right Circumstances, Rainbows Can Look Very Strange Indeed

You probably all know how rainbows form, if not from being told as a child, then from having to explain it to a child as an adult. But here's the basic version anyway in case you, uh, forgot.

The rest of this article is behind a paywall. Please sign in or subscribe to access the full content.

Light in a vacuum – as far as our best theories and experiments suggest – zips along at a constant speed C. But as it enters or leaves a medium, such as air or water, it slows down and changes direction, known as refraction. This is why it can sometimes look like people's legs / heads have been ripped clean off in a pool.

Sunlight contains many different wavelengths of light, which are slowed by different amounts as the sunlight enters a medium. Violet – the shortest wavelength in the visible spectrum – slows and refracts more than the longest wavelength, red. 

As sunlight passes through water droplets in the air at the right angles, some of that light is reflected internally at the back of the liquid drop, before being refracted again as it leaves the droplet, now traveling in a new direction. 

"An observer standing in the right place will see the dispersed sunlight reflected back towards them. Light scattered by many drops reaching the observer's eye will appear as a colourful rainbow," the UK Met Office explains.  "Different colours exit the droplets at angles varying by around two degrees from red to violet. The red light seen by an observer comes from drops slightly higher in the atmosphere than the drops that scatter violet light towards the observer."

But there is also another phenomenon known as "monochrome rainbows" or "red rainbows". In certain circumstances, you can be greeted with a big red rainbow

ⓘ IFLScience is not responsible for content shared from external sites.

So, what causes these beautiful freaks of nature?

When the Sun hits our atmosphere, light in the blue spectrum is scattered more efficiently than red light by particles within it. With less blue light hitting your eyes, you will perceive the Sun as tinted slightly yellow. The more atmosphere the light has to travel through – say at sunrise and sunset – the more blue light gets scattered, making the Sun appear redder.

Monochrome rainbows are simply rainbows that occur in the same manner outlined above, but when the light refracted by the water droplets is predominantly red from a rising or setting sun.

Cerca
Categorie
Leggi tutto
Technology
Get lifetime access to Imagiyo’s AI image generator for just $49
Best AI image generator: Get lifetime access to Imagiyo’s AI image generator for just $49...
By Test Blogger7 2025-09-12 22:00:10 0 866
Technology
The new Bose QuietComfort Ultra earbuds are dropping at the end of the month: What to know
The Bose QuietComfort Ultra (2nd gen) earbuds are here: Release date, preorder, pricing...
By Test Blogger7 2025-08-14 19:00:14 0 1K
Giochi
New Sins of a Solar Empire 2 update transforms diplomacy, the economy, and enemy AI
New Sins of a Solar Empire 2 update transforms diplomacy, the economy, and enemy AI It's a...
By Test Blogger6 2025-11-20 16:00:21 0 246
Food
OLD FASHIONED BUTTERSCOTCH PIE
OLD FASHIONED BUTTERSCOTCH PIE This homemade butterscotch pie is one your Grandmother may have...
By Test Blogger1 2025-06-17 15:00:10 0 2K
Science
The Zombie Worms Are Disappearing And It's Not A Good Thing
The Zombie Worms Are Disappearing And It's Not A Good ThingIt’s appropriate, at Halloween, to be...
By test Blogger3 2025-10-31 18:00:25 0 422