Image Credit & Copyright: Bertrand Kulik
Sunday, March 31, 2013
NASA Photo of the Day
March 27:
A Horizon Rainbow in Paris
Image Credit & Copyright: Bertrand Kulik
Explanation:
Why is this horizon so colorful?
Because, opposite the Sun, it is raining.
What is pictured above is actually just a
common rainbow.
It's uncommon appearance is caused by the Sun being unusually high in the sky during the
rainbow's creation.
Since every
rainbow's center must be exactly
opposite the Sun,
a high Sun reflecting off of a distant rain will produce a
low rainbow
where only the very top is visible -- because the rest of the
rainbow is below the
horizon.
Furthermore, no two observers can see exactly the same
rainbow --
every person finds themselves exactly between the Sun and rainbow's center,
and every
observer sees
the colorful circular band precisely 42 degrees from rainbow's center.
The above image featuring the
Eiffel Tower was taken in
Paris,
France last week.
Although the intermittent thunderstorms lasted for much of the day, the
horizon rainbow lasted for only a few minutes.
Image Credit & Copyright: Bertrand Kulik
Labels:
cool stuff
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