Physics, asked by anu888, 1 year ago

guess and write why rainbow appears semicircle on sky

Answers

Answered by ASHITHACHILAKAMARRI
4

Nice question! Rainbows are a product of sunlight passing through small droplets of water suspended in the atmosphere (or even falling through it!). Not only are they beautiful, but they are usually rare because you need a rainy day and a sunny day at the same time to make one appear -- the sun has to be shining from one part of the sky, and the rain in another part of the sky before a rainbow can appear.

The sunlight takes a complicated path through each water droplet. It comes in the side closest to the sun, bends because the index of refraction in water is bigger than that of air (you can see this effect by putting a pencil in a glass of water so that some of it sticks out and looking at it from different angles -- the pencil will apppear "broken" at the place it crosses the water surface). The sunlight, passing through the water droplet, bounces off the back surface of the droplet, travels back to the other side, and bends once again on its way out.

The reason why the rainbow is curved is because all the angles in the water drop have to be just right for the drop to send some sunlight to you, standing on the ground. So, with the sun *behind* you, only those water droplets that have the same angle formed by you, the drop, and the sun (this angle happens to be approximately 42 degrees) will contribute to the rainbow. Other droplets send their light somewhere else, and if you move to a different location, new droplets are needed to make the rainbow you see in the new location. This is why you can't go to the end of a rainbow to find the mythical leprechauns and pots of gold; anywhere you stand, the rainbow is formed by faraway drops of water reflecting and bending sunlight. The rainbow is curved because the set of all the raindrops that have the right angle between you, the drop, and the sun lie on a cone pointing at the sun with you at one tip. The rainbow may look semicircular if the sun is setting or rising (a good time to see a rainbow because the sunlight at that time can get under rain clouds because it is traveling horizontally). If the sun is higher in the sky, the earth gets in the way and you may see less than a semicircular rainbow.

The rainbow is colored because the water drops act like little prisms -- how much the light bends when it enters and exits the drop depends on its color, and light from the sun contains contributions from light of all colors. So that 42 degrees above is a bit different for red light and different still for blue light -- you have to look in a different place to see the red rainbow arc and the blue rainbow arc, so you see them as arcs in the sky of different sizes and the rainbow is striped with colors.

You can make your own rainbows with a lawn sprinkler or even a water spray-bottle that can make a fine mist. On a bright, sunny day with the sun at your back, spray some water in front of you in different directions to see where the best rainbows can be seen. Can you make one go all the way around in a circle? Rainbows crop up in the nicest places -- you can see them sometimes at the bottoms of waterfalls and even briefly in the splashes of divers at the swimming pool.



Anonymous: U have copied it from wiki pedia and
Anonymous: I am expert in physics and u are saying I have copied the answer
ASHITHACHILAKAMARRI: no
ASHITHACHILAKAMARRI: i dont that why i said
Anonymous: If u have given the answer then answer why-rainbow is seen at a height not just below our head
Anonymous: Just up on our head
ASHITHACHILAKAMARRI: Physicist: A rainbow is an angle-dependent illusion. They don’t actually exist anywhere, they just appear to. Since they can only exist at a particular angle (with respect to you and the Sun), you can never see them anywhere else in the sky.

All rainbows form a circle 84° across and exactly opposite from the Sun, no matter where you a
Anonymous: Wrong answer
Anonymous: U are just telling about rainbow read the question first
ASHITHACHILAKAMARRI: ok
Answered by manglamarya786
2

I think its because light is passing from sun to earth encountering droplets... In one direction is reason


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