Why do we see rainbows after rain?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Water droplets refract sunlight
Water droplets refract sunlight ✓ — Correct! Light refraction and dispersion! Rainbows form when: (1) Sunlight enters raindrop—refracts (bends). (2) Disperses—different wavelengths bend differently (red least, violet most). (3) Reflects off back of droplet. (4) Exits droplet—refracts again. (5) Separated colors reach eyes. Conditions needed: sun behind observer, rain ahead. Rainbow angle: 42° from antisolar point. Double rainbows—second reflection inside droplet (reversed colors). Circular rainbow (from airplane). Moonbows exist! Each person sees unique rainbow—depends on viewing angle. ROYGBIV order!
Clouds reflect colorful light — Wrong. Rainbows form inside individual raindrops—sunlight refracts, disperses into colors, then reflects back to observer's eyes.
Chemical reaction in rainwater — Wrong. No chemical reaction—purely physical optics. Light refracts and disperses through water droplets, separating into visible spectrum.
More Weather & Climate questions
- Why can a small shift toward larger hail raise damage so much?
- Why model hailstone trajectories, not just thunderstorm counts?
- Why do tropical hailstorms produce smaller hail than mid-latitude ones?
- Hail has clear and cloudy bands. Why not just 'up-down elevator rides'?
- Why is the coldest storm top not the best place for hail to grow?
- Why do supercells make 5-cm hail when ordinary storms usually cannot?
