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10 answers

NO.NO.NO.NO.NO.NO.NO.NO.NO.NO.
You are wrong.... we can see more one rainbows at a time..
there are called secondary rainbows....
rainbows not only came from rain drops...
it came from water drop(s)...
1)Rainbows may also form in mist, such as that of a waterfall
2)Rainbows may also form in the spray created by waves

Secondary rainbows:
1) A contrast-enhanced photograph of a supernumerary rainbow, with additional green and purple arcs inside the primary bow.(http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5b/Supernumerary_rainbow_03_contrast.jpg/180px-Supernumerary_rainbow_03_contrast.jpg)
2) Primary and secondary rainbows are visible, as well as a reflected primary and a faintly visible reflected secondary.(http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/af/Rainbows.jpg/250px-Rainbows.jpg)
3) A double rainbow features reversed colours in the outer (secondary) bow, with the dark Alexander's band between the bows.(http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/90/Regenbogen_%28NASA%29.jpg/250px-Regenbogen_%28NASA%29.jpg)

so your question is wrong... please change your question...
here under some sample picture...
thank you. நன்றி

2007-08-12 06:00:11 · answer #1 · answered by கதிர் 2 · 0 0

The water, in all their small droplets, are performing as one extensive prism. If shall we see gentle previous the seen spectrum, the rainbow might even have colors like ultraviolet and infrared the two area of them. The rainbow would be in a various place interior the sky reckoning on the place you seem at it from because of the fact it does not fairly exist, that's an phantasm created by utilising this one extensive prism formed of all the rain droplets. If there have been 2 aspects of rain falling at diverse angles etc then you fairly might see better than one, yet particularly all the rain drops in one small area fall interior a similar way and subsequently, as I save saying, act as a single prism, transforming into in straight forward terms one rainbow.

2016-10-15 01:47:18 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Different people from different places may sometimes see different rainbows at the same time.So there are several rainbows but a person can see one rainbow(sometimes secondary rainbow also)only from one place at a particular time.

2007-08-12 06:41:05 · answer #3 · answered by Arasan 7 · 0 0

Each drop refracts light - you see the refraction from the aggregate all the drops- what you see is a part of a giant circle where as an example, the blue light comes to you from a constant angle - the various colors are just different angles to your eye - each person sees a slightly different rainbow as their perspective is different than yours the angle from a given drop is slightly different so they see it differently. You are standing at the focus of a series of cones defining different angles...

2007-08-12 04:03:42 · answer #4 · answered by Steve E 4 · 0 0

because all the drops focus on a specific place to form the rainbow. its simple yaar

2007-08-12 03:49:30 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

no wait....thr r a lot of rainbows at diff places...it's just that u see 1 at a time and not others at that time..so u think that..

2007-08-15 07:10:23 · answer #6 · answered by Amy Jackson 2 · 0 0

where there is lot of rain there is lot of rainbow.

2007-08-15 22:26:10 · answer #7 · answered by pinku 1 · 0 0

the rain bow has as many colours/shades

2007-08-12 03:47:23 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

OPEN UR EYES DEAR THERE ARE RAINBOW EVERYWHERE IN SKY

2007-08-12 03:50:14 · answer #9 · answered by ROSERAJA 3 · 0 0

sorry friend i don't know... but i know one thing, that rainbows are not a semicircle. there circle....

2007-08-12 03:56:27 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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