Weather & Radar
Home / Editor's Pick /

Know your rainbow: Do you know all the different types?

14:00
2 October 2022

Know your rainbow
Do you know all the different types?

Dramatic double rainbow spotted by a Weather & Radar userDramatic double rainbow spotted by a Weather & Radar user

If you're tired of the rain, then let's take a look at the bright side. Or, in this case, on the colourful side. Because rain can often lead to rainbows!

A rainbow occurs when the sun shines on a curtain of rain in the air. The sunlight is split and reflected by the raindrops. We see the different colours in a rainbow because the colours in the sun's rays all have different wavelengths and are refracted differently.

The sun's rays contain all the colours at once. But when the sun's rays hit a round raindrop, the drop behaves like a prism, both deflecting and reflecting the light, splitting it into several colours.

The sun's position on the horizon determines the rainbow's appearance and shape. The sun must be at an angle of less than 42 degrees above the horizon, and the lower it is, the more curved the rainbow will be.

Double rainbows occur when there are two reflections on the back of a single raindrop, but at different angles.

Let's take a look at the rainbow's ghostly sister: the fogbow. The white arc contrasts beautifully with the light blue sky.

Fogbows are also called white rainbows and occur in much the same way as ordinary rainbows, with sunlight refracting through water droplets in the sky. The only difference is the size of the water droplets.

Settings for external content

Privacy policy

In rainbows, the water droplets are larger, so we can see more colours refracting through the droplets. In a fogbow, light is refracted through much smaller droplets, so only the white colour appears.

Sometimes, however, a red band can be seen at the outer edge of the misty arc and a blue band at the inner edge of the arc.

But if there is gold at the end of the rainbow, what might be hiding at the end of a fogbow?

We want to see your cool weather and nature experiences! You can send us photos and videos via the uploader here in the news section, or with the link here.

Weather & Radar editorial team
More on the topic
Man sits with telescope looking up at the Milky Way.
Tuesday 6 May 2025

May astronomy outlook

Meteor shower and the Flower Moon
Thursday 1 May 2025

Beating a 1990 record

Hottest start to May on record
Thursday 24 April 2025

Trail of damage

Aerial view of U.S. tornado track
All weather news
This might also interest you
Friday 2 May 2025

Thanks to a low in Iberia

Southern England warmer than Spain
Monday 28 April 2025

Breakfast brief

Hot spell begins, widely 20°C+
Wednesday 7 May 2025

Onshore breeze a factor

Cool Northeast, balmy Southwest
All articles
Weather & Radar

www.weatherandradar.ie

facebooktwitteryouTubeContact uslinkList
Privacy Policy | Legal info