Environmental Sciences, asked by gogogogo8867, 11 months ago

What are the three process taking place on water droplets to produce rainbow?

Answers

Answered by sreeharshitha13
1

One of nature's most splendid masterpieces is the rainbow. A rainbow is an excellent demonstration of the dispersion of light and one more piece of evidence that visible light is composed of a spectrum of wavelengths, each associated with a distinct color. To view a rainbow, your back must be to the sun as you look at an approximately 40 degree angle above the ground into a region of the atmosphere with suspended droplets of water or even a light mist. Each individual droplet of water acts as a tiny prism that both disperses the light and reflects it back to your eye. As you sight into the sky, wavelengths of light associated with a specific color arrive at your eye from the collection of droplets. The net effect of the vast array of droplets is that a circular arc of ROYGBIV is seen across the sky. But just exactly how do the droplets of water disperse and reflect the light? And why does the pattern always appear as ROYGBIV from top to bottom? These are the questions that we will seek to understand on this page of The Physics Classroom Tutorial. To understand these questions, we will need to draw upon our understanding of refraction, internal reflection and dispersion

Answered by spandan005
0

Answer:

Dispersion, Refraction and Total Internal Reflection.

Explanation:

firstly the sun's light ray enter the droplet and causes refraction, then that refracted ray bounces back after touching the other wall of the droplet (total internal reflection) and finally the internally reflected ray gets out of the droplet splitted into 7 different colours (dispersion).

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