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Rainbows are a very special phenomenon - not only are they packed with interesting science, they’re also an important symbol in many cultures across the globe.

So what exactly is a rainbow? It sounds like a bit of storybook magic, but three ingredients are needed to make a rainbow as we know it: water droplets, sunshine and you. We see sunlight as white but it’s actually made up of many colours. A rainbow is made during a process called refraction, where light bends inside a prism (in this case, the spherical raindrops). Each colour is refracted at a different angle and so becomes visible as the colours disperse. So if the Sun is behind you and the rain is in front of you, you’ll see the reflection of the light in the form the optical phenomenon of the rainbow - but you won’t be able to see it if you stand at a different angle.

Seven things you didn’t know about rainbows

A spray moonbow at the base of Yosemite falls.
Image caption,
This isn't a fairy realm - it's a spray moonbow captured at the base of Yosemite falls, California, USA

1. Rainbows can appear at night

It’s widely accepted that there are seven visible colours of the rainbow: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet. But every person experiences those colours differently - so in that sense every rainbow is unique. Red, having the longest wavelength, will always appear towards the outside, while the blue-spectrum colours will always appear on the inside as they have shorter wavelengths.

But there are also many magical kinds of rainbow - even a kind you can see at night! Moonbows appear when water droplets are reflecting moonlight instead of sunlight, though they're generally fainter and require the light from the Moon to be very bright. Mistbows and fogbows exist, too, and appear as a white or yellowish bow.

A spray moonbow at the base of Yosemite falls.
Image caption,
This isn't a fairy realm - it's a spray moonbow captured at the base of Yosemite falls, California, USA
A woman holds up a prism and disperses white light into a rainbow.
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All the colours on the spectrum of visible light refract at different angles
Etching of Sir Isaac Newton demonstrating dispersion using a prism
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It may be in black and white, but this illustration depicts how light can show its true colours

2. We’ve always loved dissecting rainbows

The science of rainbows had been documented all over the world since ancient times. In 65AD, Roman philosopher Seneca observed the fact that they always appear opposite the Sun and showed up in sprayed water. Aristotle suggested that all colour was celestial and made up of lightness and darkness, and this theory was widely held until 2000 years later, when Isaac Newton demonstrated refraction and dispersion using glass prisms in 1660, building on the work of many others before him. Newton established the visible spectrum had five colours, then seven as his experiments continued. These discoveries allowed us to understand both visible and invisible colour wavelengths better.

There's maths involved, too: rainbows have a 42.5 degree radius from the antisolar (facing away from the Sun) point.

Etching of Sir Isaac Newton demonstrating dispersion using a prism
Image caption,
It may be in black and white, but this illustration depicts how light can show its true colours
Gilbert Baker in a rainbow shirt, sunglasses and white cap holding the 8-striped pride flag at a parade.
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Pride flag creator Gilbert Baker carried the original 8-striped version at the 2015 San Francisco Pride parade

3. The rainbow connection is a global one

Outside of science and maths, rainbows show up in many different cultures and mythologies too. In the Bible story of Noah’s Ark, God sent a rainbow representing a to never destroy the Earth in a flood again. In Norse mythology, the rainbow is the Bifröst - a bridge between Midgard and Asgard, the realm of the gods. Across many Australian Aboriginal cultures, the Rainbow Serpent is often regarded as a creator deity, and the rainbow is them travelling from waterhole to waterhole.

In 1978, artist Gilbert Baker designed the first rainbow flag as a symbol of Pride. The flag originally had eight coloured stripes, with a meaning assigned to each. For example, the yellow stripe stood for sunlight, the green for nature, and the violet for the human spirit - no stripe for rain though! The rainbow with six colours is still flown today, as well as new versions which include many communities.

Gilbert Baker in a rainbow shirt, sunglasses and white cap holding the 8-striped pride flag at a parade.
Image caption,
Pride flag creator Gilbert Baker carried the original 8-striped version at the 2015 San Francisco Pride parade
A sky of clouds with a full rainbow above taken from the view of an aeroplane.
Image caption,
A rainbow viewed from above the clouds is all around beautiful

4. What’s over a rainbow?

All rainbows are circles, but as we usually view them from the ground, we only see the arch as it’s cut off. Unfortunately you can’t reach the end of a rainbow, so there’s no pot of gold hiding there.

What you're technically viewing is the base of a cone. If you were to see it from far enough away and from the right angle, such as from an aeroplane window, you would see the whole circle.

Image caption,
A double arc occurs when the light bounces back inside the raindrops - the outer rainbow colours are always in reverse order

5. Is there a rainbow season?

Obviously we know that rainbows depend on the right weather conditions - but did you know season affects them too? You’re less likely to see them in winter because of snow: while snowflakes are made up of frozen droplets of rain, they block the light and prevent it from bending and reflecting back. Surprisingly, rainbows are most common in summer, probably because of the sunshine - look west to view rainbows in the morning and east in the evening.

Environment is also a key factor. Kauai, Hawaiʻi, is known as the Rainbow State for a reason - the island is home to Mount Waiʻaleʻale, whose name means ‘rippling water’, one of the wettest spots on Earth. Rainbows are likely to be spotted here more frequently than anywhere else.

An illustration of the Delta river on Titan.
Image caption,
Titan's 'rivers' of flowing methane give it a hazy atmosphere, so Titanic rainbows would be orange-tinted

6. Over the Moon

There may be rainbows on other astral bodies. On Titan, one of Saturn’s moons, there is the presence of water, but it’s unlike water on Earth - rather it’s liquid methane, which would be natural gas in our atmosphere.

Rainbows viewed through Titan’s ‘water’ would have similar characteristics to earthly rainbows, e.g. the blue light would appear on the inside with red on the outside. But the angle of refraction through the methane droplets would be different, so a Titan rainbow would be much bigger at a 49 degree radius from the antisolar point. Titan’s atmosphere is also -179°C, so these would very much be ‘winter’ rainbows.

Infrared rainbows - also known as monochrome rainbows - appear as one red bow, and these are suspected to be a lot more common on Titan than a multicoloured rainbow. However infrared light is invisible, so you would need technology such as night vision goggles to see them.

An illustration of the Delta river on Titan.
Image caption,
Titan's 'rivers' of flowing methane give it a hazy atmosphere, so Titanic rainbows would be orange-tinted
Glowing rainbow UV paint on a pair of hands.
Image caption,
Many animals see the world through ultraviolet glasses - but we need the aid of a black light!

7. (Ultra) Violet: the most mystical colour

You know by now there are seven visible colours in the rainbow, but violet is perhaps the most intriguing. Violet is different from purple - in fact, what our brain understands as ‘purple’ doesn’t actually exist, as it doesn’t have a static wavelength. Instead, our brain ‘fills in’ the gap between red and blue by mixing the two visible colours to create purple.

Violet on the other hand is a spectral wave colour which we can see, but ultraviolet (UV), meaning ‘beyond violet’, is a type of radiation with a shorter wavelength and is blocked by our corneas. These radiations are present in sunlight and are made up of UVA and UVB rays. Both are damaging to our DNA, but UVB rays help us to generate Vitamin D - which is why it’s important to enjoy the Sun safely and use sun protection. Many insects and animals can process spectral colours which we can't. For example, UV light helps reindeer find lichen in the snow, and ripe bananas glow blue under UV light, which could attract nocturnal hunters to eat them and spread the seeds. It's thought that dogs and cats can also see on the UV spectrum - which might explain why your house cat stares at invisible things!

This article was published in June 2023

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