What is a rainbow?
Author Donald Ahrens in his text Meteorology
Today describes a rainbow as "one of the most spectacular light
shows observed on earth". Indeed the traditional rainbow is sunlight
spread out into its spectrum of colors and diverted to the eye of the
observer by water droplets. The "bow" part of the word describes
the fact that the rainbow is a group of nearly circular arcs of color all
having a common center.
Where is the sun when you see a rainbow?
This is a good question to start thinking
about the physical process that gives rise to a rainbow. Most people have
never noticed that the sun is always behind you when you face a rainbow,
and that the center of the circular arc of the rainbow is in the direction
opposite to that of the sun. The rain, of course, is in the direction of
the rainbow.
What makes the bow?
A question like this calls for a proper
physical answer. We will discuss the formation of a rainbow by raindrops.
It is a problem in optics that was first clearly discussed by Rene
Descartes in 1637. An interesting historical account of this is to be
found in Carl Boyer's book, The Rainbow From Myth to Mathematics.
Descartes simplified the study of the rainbow by reducing it to a study of
one water droplet and how it interacts with light falling upon it.
He writes:"Considering that this
bow appears not only in the sky, but also in the air near us, whenever
there are drops of water illuminated by the sun, as we can see in certain
fountains, I readily decided that it arose only from the way in which the
rays of light act on these drops and pass from them to our eyes. Further,
knowing that the drops are round, as has been formerly proved, and seeing
that whether they are larger or smaller, the appearance of the bow is not
changed in any way, I had the idea of making a very large one, so that I
could examine it better.
Descarte describes how he held up a large
sphere in the sunlight and looked at the sunlight reflected in it. He
wrote "I found that if the
sunlight came, for example, from the part of the sky which is marked AFZ
and my eye was at the point E, when I put
the globe in position BCD, its part D appeared all red, and much more
brilliant than the rest of it; and that whether I approached it or receded
from it, or put it on my right or my left, or even turned it round about
my head, provided that the line DE always made an angle of about forty-two
degrees with the line EM, which we are to think of as drawn from the
center of the sun to the eye, the part D appeared always similarly red;
but that as soon as I made this angle DEM even a little larger, the red
color disappeared; and if I made the angle a little smaller, the color did
not disappear all at once, but divided itself first as if into two parts,
less brilliant, and in which I could see yellow, blue, and other colors
... When I examined more particularly, in the globe BCD, what it was which
made the part D appear red, I found that it was the rays of the sun which,
coming from A to B, bend on entering the water at the point B, and to pass
to C, where they are reflected to D, and bending there again as they pass
out of the water, proceed to the point ".
This quotation illustrates how the shape of
the rainbow is explained. To simplify the analysis, consider the path of a
ray of monochromatic light through a single spherical raindrop. Imagine
how light is refracted as it enters the raindrop, then how it is reflected
by the internal, curved, mirror-like surface of the raindrop, and finally
how it is refracted as it emerges from the drop. If we then apply the
results for a single raindrop to a whole collection of raindrops in the
sky, we can visualize the shape of the bow.
The traditional diagram to illustrate this
is shown here as adapted from Humphreys, Physics of the Air. 
It represents the path of one light ray incident on a water droplet from
the direction SA. As the light beam enters the surface of the drop at A,
it is bent (refracted) a little and strikes the inside wall of the drop at
B, where it is reflected back to C. As it emerges from the drop it is
refracted (bent) again into the direction CE. The angle D represents a
measure of the deviation of the emergent ray from its original direction.
Descartes calculated this deviation for a ray of red light to be about 180
- 42 or 138 degrees.
The ray drawn here is significant because
it represents the ray that has the smallest angle of deviation of all the
rays incident upon the raindrop. It is called the Descarte or
rainbow ray and much of the sunlight as it is refracted and reflected
through the raindrop is focused along this ray. Thus the reflected light
is diffuse and weaker except near the direction of this rainbow ray.
It is this concentration of rays near the minimum deviation that gives
rise to the arc of rainbow.
The sun is so far away that we can, to a
good approximation, assume that sunlight can be represented by a set of
parallel rays all falling on the water globule and being refracted,
reflected internally, and refracted again on emergence from the droplet in
a manner like the figure. Descartes writes
I took my pen and made an accurate
calculation of the paths of the rays which fall on the different points of
a globe of water to determine at which angles, after two refractions and
one or two reflections they will come to the eye, and I then found that
after one reflection and two refractions there are many more rays
which can be seen at an angle of from forty-one to forty-two degrees than
at any smaller angle; and that there are none which can be seen at a
larger angle" (the angle he is referring to is 180 - D).
A typical raindrop is spherical and
therefore its effect on sunlight is symmetrical about an axis through the
center of the drop and the source of light (in this case the sun). Because
of this symmetry, the two-dimensional illustration of the figure serves us
well and the complete picture can be visualized by rotating the two
dimensional illustration about the axis of symmetry. The symmetry of the
focusing effect of each drop is such that whenever we view a raindrop
along the line of sight defined by the rainbow ray, we will see a
bright spot of reflected/refracted sunlight. Referring to the figure, we
see that the rainbow ray for red light makes an angle of 42 degrees
between the direction of the incident sunlight and the line of sight.
Therefore, as long as the raindrop is viewed along a line of sight that
makes this angle with the direction of incident light, we will see a
brightening. The rainbow is thus a circle of angular radius 42 degrees,
centered on the antisolar point, as shown schematically here.
We don't see a full circle because the
earth gets in the way. The lower the sun is to the horizon, the more of
the circle we see -right at sunset, we would see a full semicircle of the
rainbow with the top of the arch 42 degrees above the horizon. The higher
the sun is in the sky, the smaller is the arch of the rainbow above the
horizon.
What makes the colors in the rainbow?
The traditional description of the rainbow is
that it is made up of seven colors - red, orange, yellow, green, blue,
indigo, and violet. Actually, the rainbow is a whole continuum of colors
from red to violet and even beyond the colors that the eye can see.
The colors of the rainbow arise from two
basic facts:
- Sunlight is made up of the whole range
of colors that the eye can detect. The range of sunlight colors,
when combined, looks white to the eye. This property of sunlight
was first demonstrated by Sir Isaac Newton in 1666.
- Light of different colors is refracted
by different amounts when it passes from one medium (air, for example)
into another (water or glass, for example).
Descartes and Willebrord Snell had determined
how a ray of light is bent, or refracted, as it traverses regions of
different densities, such as air and water. When the light paths through a
raindrop are traced for red and blue light, one finds that the angle of
deviation is different for the two colors because blue light is bent or
refracted more than is the red light.
This implies that when we see a rainbow and its band of colors we are
looking at light refracted and reflected from different raindrops,
some viewed at an angle of 42 degrees; some, at an angle of 40 degrees,
and some in between. This is illustrated in this
drawing, adapted from Johnson's Physical Meteorology. This
rainbow of two colors would have a width of almost 2 degrees (about four
times larger than the angular size as the full moon). Note that even
though blue light is refracted more than red light in a single drop, we
see the blue light on the inner part of the arc because we are looking
along a different line of sight that has a smaller angle (40 degrees) for
the blue.
Ana excellent laboratory exercise on the
mathematics of rainbows is here,
and F. K. Hwang has produced a fine Java
Aplet illustrating this refraction, and Nigel Greenwood has written a
program that operates in MS
Excel that illustrates the way the angles change as a function of the
sun's angle.
Ben Lanterman has made available several
beautiful photographs
of rainbows on the web.
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. Blue light emerges at an even larger angle of 53 degrees°. his
effect produces a secondary rainbow that has its colors reversed compared
to the primary, as illustrated in the drawing,
adapted from the Science Universe Series Sight, Light, and Color.
It is possible for light to be reflected
more than twice within a raindrop, and one can calculate where the higher
order rainbows might be seen; but these are never seen in normal
circumstances.
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!
What are Supernumerary Arcs?
In some rainbows, faint arcs just inside and
near the top of the primary bow can be seen. These are called
supernumerary arcs and were explained by Thomas Young in 1804 as arising
from the interference of light along certain rays within the drop. Young's
work had a profound influence on theories of the physical nature of light
and his studies of the rainbow were a fundamental element of this. Young
interpreted light in terms of it being a wave of some sort and that when
two rays are scattered in the same direction within a raindrop, they may
interfere with each other. Depending on how the rays mesh together, the
interference can be constructive, in which case the rays produce a
brightening, or destructive, in which case there is a reduction in
brightness. This phenomenon is clearly described in Nussenzveig's article
"The Theory of the Rainbow" in which he writes: "At
angles very close to the rainbow angle the two paths through the droplet
differ only slightly, and so the two rays interfere constructively. As the
angle increases, the two rays follow paths of substantially different
lengths. When the difference equals half of the wavelength, the
interference is completely destructive; at still greater angles the beams
reinforce again. The result is a periodic variation in the intensity of
the scattered light, a series of alternately bright and dark bands."
Mikolaj and Pawel Sawicki have posted
several beautiful photographs
of rainbows showing these arcs.
The "purity" of the colors of the
rainbow depends on the size of the raindrops. Large drops (diameters of a
few millimeters) give bright rainbows with well defined colors; small
droplets (diameters of about 0.01 mm) produce rainbows of overlapping
colors that appear nearly white. And remember that the models that predict
a rainbow arc all assume spherical shapes for raindrops.
There is never a single
size for water drops in rain but a mixture of many sizes and shapes. This
results in a composite rainbow. Raindrops generally don't "grow"
to radii larger than about 0.5 cm without breaking up because of
collisions with other raindrops, although occasionally drops a few
millimeters larger in radius have been observed when there are very few
drops (and so few collisions between the drops) in a rainstorm. Bill
Livingston suggests: " If you are brave enough, look up during a
thunder shower at the falling drops. Some may hit your eye (or glasses),
but this is not fatal. You will actually see that the drops are distorted
and are oscillating."
It is the surface tension of water that
moulds raindrops into spherical shapes, if no other forces are acting on
them. But as a drop falls in the air, the 'drag' causes a distortion in
its shape, making it somewhat flattened. Deviations from a spherical shape
have been measured by suspending drops in the air stream of a vertical
wind tunnel (Pruppacher and Beard, 1970, and Pruppacher and Pitter, 1971).
Small drops of radius less than 140 microns (0.014 cm) remain spherical,
but as the size of the drop increases, the flattening becomes noticeable.
For drops with a radius near 0.14 cm, the height/width ratio is 0.85. This
flattening increases for larger drops.
Spherical drops produce symmetrical
rainbows, but rainbows seen when the sun is near the horizon are often
observed to be brighter at their sides, the vertical part, than at their
top. Alistair Fraser has explained this phenomenon as resulting from the
complex mixture of size and shape of the raindrops. The reflection and
refraction of light from a flattened water droplet is not symmetrical. For
a flattened drop, some of the rainbow ray is lost at top and bottom of the
drop. Therefore, we see the rays from these flattened drops only as we
view them horizontally; thus the rainbow produced by the large drops is is
bright at its base. Near the top of the arc only small spherical drops
produce the fainter rainbow.
What does a rainbow look like through dark
glasses?
This is a "trick" question because
the answer depends on whether or not your glasses are Polaroid. When light
is reflected at certain angles it becomes polarized (discussed again quite
well in Nussenzveig's article), and it has been found that the rainbow
angle is close to that angle of reflection at which incident,
unpolarized light (sunlight) is almost completely polarized. So if you
look at a rainbow with Polaroid sunglasses and rotate the lenses around
the line of sight, part of the rainbow will disappear!
Other Questions about the Rainbow
Humphreys (Physics of the Air, p. 478)
discusses several "popular" questions about the rainbow:
- "What is the rainbow's
distance?" It is nearby or far away, according to where the
raindrops are, extending from the closest to the farthest illuminated
drops along the elements of the rainbow cone.
- Why is the rainbow so frequently seen
during summer and so seldom during winter?" To see a rainbow, one
has to have rain and sunshine. In the winter, water droplets freeze
into ice particles that do not produce a rainbow but scatter light in
other very interesting patterns.
- "Why are rainbows so rarely seen at
noon?" Remember that the center of the rainbow's circle is
opposite the sun so that it is as far below the level of the observer
as the sun is above it.
- "Do two people ever see the same
rainbow?" Humphreys points out that "since the rainbow is a
special distribution of colors (produced in a particular way) with
reference to a definite point - the eye of the observer - and as no
single distribution can be the same for two separate points, it
follows that two observers do not, and cannot, see the same
rainbow." In fact, each eye sees its own rainbow!!
Of course, a camera lens will record an image of a rainbow which can
then be seen my many people! (thanks to Tom and Rachel Ludovise for
pointing this out!)
- "Can the same rainbow be seen by
reflection as seen directly?" On the basis of the arguments given
in the preceding question, bows appropriate for two different points
are produced by different drops; hence, a bow seen by reflection is
not the same as the one seen directly".
What are Reflection Rainbows?
A reflection rainbow is defined as one
produced by the reflection of the source of incident light (usually the
sun). Photographs of them are perhaps the most impressive of rainbow
photographs. The reflected rainbow may be considered as a combination of
two rainbows produced by sunlight coming from two different directions -
one directly from the sun, the other from the reflected image of the sun.
The angles are quite different and therefore the elevation of the rainbow
arcs will be correspondingly different. This is illustrated in a diagram
adapted from Greenler"s Rainbows, Halos, and Glories. The
rainbow produced by sunlight reflected from the water is higher in the sky
than is the one produced by direct sunlight.
What is a Lunar Rainbow?
A full moon is bright enough to have its light
refracted by raindrops just as is the case for the sun. Moonlight is much
fainter, of course, so the lunar rainbow is not nearly as bright as one
produced by sunlight. Lunar rainbows have infrequently been observed since
the time of Aristotle or before. A graphic description of one was writen
by Dr. Mikkelson.
Rainbows and Proverbs
There is a delightful book by Humphreys
entitled Weather Proverbs and Paradoxes. In it, he discusses the
meteorological justifications of some proverbs associated with rainbows,
such as "Rainbow at night, shepherd's delight;Rainbow in morning,
shepherds take warning,"If there be a rainbow in the eve,It will rain
and leave; But if there be a rainbow in the morrow It will neither lend
nor borrow", and Rainbow to windward, foul fall the day; Rainbow to
leeward, damp runs away."
The meteorological discussion Humphreys
presents is appropriate for the northern temperate zones that have a
prevailing wind, and also for a normal diurnal change in the weather. |