Many of us know that triple rainbows are very rare, but why is it so hard to find the weather phenomenon? |
Triple Rainbows
Could there be a triple
rainbow?
BY KATE KERSHNER
Charles
Montgomery Burns (aka the evil Mr. Burns from TV's "The Simpsons")
asks a similarly plaintive question in his autobiography "Will There Ever
Be a Rainbow?"
We'll
do our best to answer it – and unlike Mr. Burns we won't use a ghostwriter.
Unlike
ho-hum rainbows and even double rainbows (sorry, awe-inspired YouTubers, but they happen quite a bit), triple rainbows are
not your run-of-the-mill weather phenomenon.
In
fact, they're so rare that prior to a 2011 image that we'll talk about later
there had only been five verified reports of triple rainbows in 250 years [source: Byrd].
Let's
get a quick tutorial in how rainbows work.
When
light (in this case, sunlight) enters a raindrop, it reflects once off the back of the drop, and then bends
again as it leaves the drop [source: Mass].
This
is when you see a single rainbow.
If
light is reflected twice in the drop of water, you're going to get yourself a
double rainbow [source: Byrd].
As
we said earlier, double rainbows are not so unusual, because it's not that rare
to have light coming from a couple of different angles.
But
it's a way different story when it comes to triple rainbows.
Technically
the same idea applies – the water must reflect the light three times. Yet this
is not so easy.
There
are specific conditions necessary to get the right light and atmosphere.
According
to Raymond Lee, a professor of meteorology at the U.S. Naval Academy, they
include dark clouds and a shower of uniformly sized drops [source: Geere].
Here's
the big difference between triple rainbows and double rainbows.
With
a triple rainbow, the third reflection is actually only visible in the opposite
part of the sky.
That
also means the third arc of a triple rainbow is behind you, in the part of the
sky where the sun is visible – not exactly the greatest conditions
for spotting a rainbow.
Adding
to the trouble is that each reflection of the rainbow gets dimmer, so you see
only a very light third arc [source: Geere].
Back
to that picture that surfaced in 2011.
After
talk about the ideal conditions for triple rainbows, a few people got
interested in trying to record some.
Photographer
Michael Grossman got some extraordinary photography of a triple rainbow in 2011
and, that same year, meteorologist Michael Theusner published a paper citing
evidence that he captured a quaternary rainbow [source: Theusner].
The
lesson here? If you really want to impress the Internet, post a video of yourself
losing it over a quadruple rainbow.
Kate Kershner, Contributing Writer
Kate Kershner has a degree in creative writing from Western Washington University.
Kate Kershner has a degree in creative writing from Western Washington University.
https://science.howstuffworks.com/nature/climate-weather/atmospheric/triple-rainbow.htm
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