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    Home / Editor's Pick /

    Weather explained: How do double rainbows form?

13:00
18 January 2023

Weather explained
How do double rainbows form?

Double rainbow
A Weather & Radar user sent in this double rainbow, captured in Gourock, Scotland.

Rainbows can brighten any rainy day, but a double rainbow brings an extra-special shine! Do you know how they appear?

Let’s start with a standard rainbow. To see a rainbow, the sun must be behind the observer. The raindrops refract the sunlight, break it down into its basic colours and reflect them.

The rainbow appears to us from the outside inwards in the following colours: red, orange, yellow, green, blue and finally violet. The lower the sun is, the bigger the rainbow appears.

How about double rainbows?

Sometimes you can see another so-called secondary rainbow next to the main rainbow. This is located above the main rainbow at an angle of 51 degrees.

The second rainbow is created by another reflection within the raindrop. The path of the light is thus longer and part of the light is lost. Therefore, the second rainbow appears only faintly, if at all.

[Double rainbow graphic]

At the same time, the colours in the secondary rainbow are arranged in reverse to those in the main rainbow.

If you spot rainbows, double rainbows, or even just rain! We love seeing the weather near you, snap a picture and send it in using our uploader or tap the camera icon in the app.

Ryan Hathaway
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