sign up I login
 advanced
refer a friend - earn nickels!!

Ask & Discuss Questions with Community & Experts

Moderation Team
 90 chars left    advanced
Ask iit jee aieee pet cbse icse state board experts Expert Question: about rianbow
Forum Index -> Modern Physics like the article? email it to a friend.  
Author Message
sandesh1 (2)

Cool goIITian

Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer. 0  [1 rates]

sandesh1's Avatar

total posts: 41    
offline Offline
why rainbow is seen in arc shaped (i.e. in circular) help,,,,,,,,,,,
    
master_purav (1343)

Blazing goIITian

Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer. 217  [346 rates]

master_purav's Avatar

total posts: 814    
offline Offline
Visit this link.

The answer is provided by the forum expert edison.

http://www.goiit.com/posts/list/mechanics-why-is-a-rainbow-arc-shaped-5555.htm

"If you win, you shall not have to explain and if you lose, you wont be there to explain"
~ Adolph Hitler
 this reply: 0 points  (with Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
 
You have to be logged on to rate
  
iitkgp_bipin (6498)

Forum Expert Blazing goIITian

Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer. 1106  bad job dude!! I dont approve of this answer! 1  [1592 rates]

iitkgp_bipin's Avatar

total posts: 4435    
offline Offline
Imagine looking at a rainbow off to the east. The sun is setting behind you in the west. White sunlight (a combination of all the colors in the rainbow) travels through the atmosphere, flies astward past your head, and hits the water droplets as they fall from a passing storm. When a beam of light hits one of these droplets, one of two things can happen: The light could simply pass through, or, more interestingly, it could hit the front of the droplet, bend as it enters, then reflect off the back of the droplet and leave through the front, back toward us. This is the light that forms rainbows.

The amount light bends as it passes through the droplet depends on the light's wavelength, or color -- red light bends the most, orange and yellow slightly less, and so on, down to violet, which bends the least.

Since each color is bent through a specific angle -- red light comes from the sun and is reflected back at an angle 42 degrees away from its original direction, while blue light bends only 40 degrees -- each color appears at a different place in the sky. Red, say, denotes all those locations in the sky 42 degrees away from an imaginary line connecting the sun to the back of your head. Together, these places trace out an arch. Since blue appears only 40 degrees from this imaginary line (which also connects your head to its shadow), the blue arch of a rainbow is always below the red.

Bipin Kumar Dubey
Chemical Dept.
IIT Kharagpur

 this reply: 0 points  (with Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
 
You have to be logged on to rate
  
 
Forum Index -> Modern Physics
Go to:   

 Aakash Institute IIT/ AIEEE/ Medical Crash Course
Name  
E-mail  
Phone  
Mobile  
** Hurry. Exclusive goIIT Offer. Limited Seats Only!
available in: New Delhi, Amritsar, Bhatinda, Bokaro, Chandigarj, Dehradun, Guwhati, Hyderabad, Indore, Jaipur, Kanpur, Karnal, Kolkata, Kota, Lucknow, Ludhiana, Mumbai, Noida, Patiala, Patna, Pune, Ranchi, Varanasi
Top Offers for goIITians
Correspondence Courses
Brilliant Tutorials
Narayana Institute
Aakash Institute
Classroom/Crash Courses
Aakash-IITJEE : AIEEE
Aakash-IITJEE : DCE
Aakash-IITJEE : MHTCET
Aakash Institute : AIPMT
Online Test Series
Brilliant Tutorials
Narayana Institute
Aakash Institute
Mahesh Tutorials
AMITY      Sri Chaitanya