A Conversation for Rainbows
Circular rainbows
Xanthus Started conversation May 9, 1999
They say that if you see a rainbow from an aeroplane it's circular - so long as the plane is high enough.
Circular rainbows
Xanthus Posted May 9, 1999
Must be twice as good as the usual semi-circle.
It's funny that while h2g2 has 6,000(ish) researchers, I keep bumping into the same ones in different forums - kinda feel at home already.
Circular rainbows
Xanthus Posted May 9, 1999
Well if it's not coincidence then there are other stalking me too. Are you trying to make me paranoid or something?
While your here though (to use an all too often used phrase to tekkie support people) I've a user page (P43543) which I'm not sure whether or not it goes against your advertising policy - it was only meant to be a recommendation. Please delete the last part if you don't like it.
Circular rainbows
Jim Lynn Posted May 10, 1999
Well, presuming you don't work there or own it, a personal recommendation is perfectly acceptable (and, indeed, encouraged). Don't forget - if people disagree, they'll soon tell you.
Circular rainbows
Pink Posted May 11, 1999
I've never seen a rainbow from a plane before, but I have seen a circular rainbow. It was right around the sun.
Circular rainbows
Agrajag Posted May 11, 1999
They are not actually rainbows, but I know what you mean. You get one around the moon as well. They both require thin clouds. If you wish to see a circular rainbow get as high as you can with a hosepipe on a sunny day and spray. Steps are ok but a fire station tower is better.
Circular rainbows
Pink Posted May 11, 1999
What are they if they aren't rainbows? Or do you just mean that it was not rain that 'made' them?
Circular rainbows
Xanthus Posted May 11, 1999
'Get high as you can'? I'm afraid that, considering the topic of conversation, that is maybe a bad choice of words. Get high as a kite and I'm sure rainbows is not all you'll see!
But, yes, the key is that that center point of the 'rainbow' is the light source itself - if, indeed there is such a thing as a moon rainbow - and I've no reason to believe that there isn't, then 'around the moon' is where you'll see it!
Circular rainbows
Agrajag Posted May 12, 1999
What I mean is they have another name other than rainbows, which escapes me.The difference is whether you are facing the sun or not. I live by the coast so you see them quite a lot where the thin cloud sits above the coast-line on sunny days. They look much better if you are higher than a kite or paraglider. The circle/ark will still be at 22 degrees (angular not centigrade) and requires water droplets in both cases. Has anyone ever noticed a second rainbow, reversed and at about 31 deg.?
Circular rainbows
Pink Posted May 13, 1999
Oh, i see what you mean. It probably would "look much better if you are higher than a kite" - everything else always does.
I've seen 'a second rainbow', only twice though. It's cool - red through purple and then purple through red.
Circular rainbows
Water-Eat Posted May 13, 1999
The name you and Pink are looking for is "Sun-Dogs" or "Moon-Dogs"
It comes from the Greek Legends about a 5-legged hound that lived on the sun. His coat was made of sulpher, and he shot robotic killer bees out of his eye sockets.
Sorry - thats a lie. I don't know where the name comes from, but they _ are_ called sun-dogs. You can see one in the movie "The Dear-Hunter" - there's one in the sky one day when the Robert De Niro character comes out of work.
Circular rainbows
Pink Posted May 14, 1999
LOL
Thanks for the info Water-Eat. I'll have to check out "The Dear-Hunter" some time.
Circular rainbows
reddy Posted May 27, 1999
I think there is no reason why there shouldn't BE a rainbow made out of MoonLight. But as the MoonLight is much less intensive than SunLight (several thousand times), we poor humans are not able to see it. Of course you would have to stand with your back to the moon and have the rain (or what WaterDropProducingEvent ever) in front of you.
Circular rainbows
Pink Posted May 28, 1999
Moonlight ... ummmm ... what? 'Moon light' is just sun light reflected off the moon. And I don't know about anyone else, but I can see it.
Circular rainbows
reddy Posted May 28, 1999
sure, but as the moon is not a mirror but a piece of rock, dust
ice and nasa equipment, it reflects just a small amount of the
sunlight. So do the raindrops so that the intensity of a rainbow is
less than the intensity of the sun, and the intensity of a "Moonrainbow"
is less than the intensity of the "moonlight" which is much less
intensive than sunlight which after all makes it very weak, so that
Sir Newtons fabulous Assistant could not sse it..
Circular rainbows
Agrajag Posted Jun 1, 1999
Talk about intense. As far as I know you only get moondogs,(see above) not propper moonbows. These have a lot less colour. i.e. none as they only stimulate the rods, not the cones.
;~]
Circular rainbows
reddy Posted Jun 3, 1999
A very big difference between MoonDogs and MoonBows is that you see the first when you are looking in direction of the moon and the second when you are looking away from the moon.
(apart from intense (Thanks ))
Key: Complain about this post
Circular rainbows
- 1: Xanthus (May 9, 1999)
- 2: Jim Lynn (May 9, 1999)
- 3: Xanthus (May 9, 1999)
- 4: Jim Lynn (May 9, 1999)
- 5: Xanthus (May 9, 1999)
- 6: Agrajag (May 10, 1999)
- 7: Jim Lynn (May 10, 1999)
- 8: Pink (May 11, 1999)
- 9: Agrajag (May 11, 1999)
- 10: Pink (May 11, 1999)
- 11: Xanthus (May 11, 1999)
- 12: Agrajag (May 12, 1999)
- 13: Pink (May 13, 1999)
- 14: Water-Eat (May 13, 1999)
- 15: Pink (May 14, 1999)
- 16: reddy (May 27, 1999)
- 17: Pink (May 28, 1999)
- 18: reddy (May 28, 1999)
- 19: Agrajag (Jun 1, 1999)
- 20: reddy (Jun 3, 1999)
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