Saturday, June 21, 2008

DOUBLE RAINBOW - National Cathedral, DC

Taken June 18, 2008 following Tim Russert's memorial service
(photos may not be republished either in print or on the web without consent)

What makes a double rainbow? Sometimes we see two rainbows at once; what causes this? We have followed the path of a ray of sunlight as it enters and is reflected inside the raindrop. But not all of the energy of the ray escapes the raindrop after it is reflected once. A part of the ray is reflected again and travels along inside the drop to emerge from the drop. The rainbow we normally see is called the primary rainbow and is produced by one internal reflection; the secondary rainbow arises from two internal reflections and the rays exit the drop at an angle of 50 degrees° rather than the 42°degrees for the red primary bow.

Why is the sky brighter inside a rainbow? Notice the contrast between the sky inside the arc and outside it. When one studies the refraction of sunlight on a raindrop one finds that there are many rays emerging at angles smaller than the rainbow ray, but essentially no light from single internal reflections at angles greater than this ray. Thus there is a lot of light within the bow, and very little beyond it. Because this light is a mix of all the rainbow colors, it is white. In the case of the secondary rainbow, the rainbow ray is the smallest angle and there are many rays emerging at angles greater than this one. Therefore the two bows combine to define a dark region between them - called Alexander's Dark Band, in honor of Alexander of Aphrodisias who discussed it some 1800 years ago! (Courtesy of http://eo.ucar.edu/rainbows/)



1 comment:

Goddess Findings said...

Oh my WORD! What a gorgeous gorgeous photo!!!!! Is this the same rainbow I was talking about in my post??? If so, I would love to post it on my blog- with your credits and link to your blog? I am AMAZED at how gorgeous this is, thank you so much for sharing with me. ... Cheers, Janice