BBC Home

Explore the BBC

Front Page

Life | The Universe | Everything | Advanced Search
 
Front PageReadTalkContributeHelp!FeedbackWho is Online
New visitors: Create your membership
Returning members: Sign in
 
This is the Conversation Forum for Answers to Children's Questions
<< Why are plants green?
Tell them the truth! >>

Subject: Why the sky is blue (and why we get rainbows)...
Posted Jun 4, 2003 by
Researcher 108409
 
Posting 1

Next Posting
Let's start with what we know about light? What colour is light? What we normally think of as white light is actually a whole range of colours, from red right through to purple. You should be able to show this fairly easily, by recreating one of Isaac Newton's experiments.

All you need is a torch and a clear prism. If you can't find a glass or plastic prism, you can make something that should (!) work just as well - take a flat bottomed clear plastic (or glass) container, and fill about a quarter full with water. If you tilt the container, one end will be 'deeper' than the other, so you effectively have a prism.

Just shine the torch through the prism - you may need to move the torch around, trying different angles to get a good result. Also, it will be easier to see the result with a narrower beam of light.


So, 'white' light is made up of lots of different colours. What the above experiment also shows is that we can split the colours using a prism. The prism bends the different colours by different amounts - red gets bent the least, blue and purple gets bent the most.

We now need to think about how the light from the Sun is affected as it comes to us, on Earth. As it approaches the Earth, it enters the atmosphere, which acts like a prism, and bends the rays of light.

Since the red/orange/yellow light doesn't get bent very much, we see the Sun as being a yellowy orange colour. All the green, blue and purple light gets bent much more - so much that it appears (to us) not to come from the Sun at all, but from the rest of the sky. So when the Sun is high in the sky, we get a blue sky.

However, things are different when the sun is low in the sky - just after dawn and before dusk. If you look towards the Sun (but not straight at it, as this can damage your sight), the sky is orangey red. Again, the blue light has been bent more than the red - but because of the position of the Sun, the light is passing through more of the atmosphere, so the blue light gets bent *even more* than before. It gets bent so much that we don't see very much of it at all. The red light is also bent more then before, which (along with the absence of blue light) explains why more of the sky is orangey red.


So what about rainbows? These are caused by the same effect, but this time it is the rain which acts as a prism. Each drop of rain splits the light, just like the prism in the above experiment. As well as this, the light is actually reflected off the back of the raindrop (notice that whenever you are looking at a rainbow, the Sun is directly behind you)!

Let us concentrate on the middle part of the rainbow - where the colours are (mostly) horizontal stripes. When the light leaves a single raindrop, it is split so that the blue light is 'higher' than the red light. The effect of this is that you only see red light from a raindrop that is higher in the sky than one you see blue light from. So, for the central part of the rainbow, you see red at the top and blue/purple at the bottom. The same effect is true for the rest of the rainbow, although the 'directions' are slightly different.

Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Why the sky is blue (and why we get rainbows)...
Posted Jun 4, 2003 by
Researcher 108409
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 2

Previous PostingNext Posting
http://www.phy.ntnu.edu.tw/java/Rainbow/rainbow.html has a very good java applet showing how the light is refracted and reflected in a single raindrop.

Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Why the sky is blue (and why we get rainbows)...
Posted Jun 4, 2003 by
Mu Beta
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 3

Previous PostingNext Posting
I think we should all be very lucky if the kid doesn't fall asleep before you finish that explanation, Justin.tongueout

B

Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Why the sky is blue (and why we get rainbows)...
Posted Jun 5, 2003 by
Researcher 108409
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 4

Previous PostingNext Posting
nahnah

Cheeky blighter...

Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Why is the sky?
Posted Jun 5, 2003 by
Luxringer
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 5

Previous PostingNext Posting
How about this one then, that I apparantly asked when I was small.

"Why is the sky?" I'm sure this is also answerable by a long Physics lecture.

I think when answeing kids you have to think logically (like them) and probably simplify down a bit.

Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Why is the sky?
Posted Jun 5, 2003 by
Behind Geddon's wall, The Wall of death! (chemist-assassin, keeper of the hooded swan)
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 6

Previous PostingNext Posting
Don't forget to add that the angle between sunlight, raindrop, and eye is a coincidental 42 degrees. Let's educate our kids properly!!winkeye

Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Why is the sky?
Posted Oct 5, 2003 by
Mu Beta
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 7

Previous PostingNext Posting
"Why is the Sky?"

Because Rupert Murdoch said so...

B

Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Why is the sky?
Posted Oct 5, 2003 by
Luxringer
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 8

Previous Posting
biggrin rofl

Reply
Click here to register a complaint about this Posting




Already at Start of ConversationNo Older Postings to ShowNo Newer Postings to ShowAlready at End of Conversation
Postings 1-20

Conversation list


Most of the content on h2g2 is created by h2g2's Researchers, who are members of the public. The views expressed are theirs and unless specifically stated are not those of the BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of any external sites referenced. In the event that you consider anything on this page to be in breach of the site's House Rules, please click on the relevant button to alert our Moderation Team.


Already at Start of ConversationNo Older Postings to ShowNo Newer Postings to ShowAlready at End of Conversation
Postings 1-20

Conversation list

Front PageReadTalkContributeHelp!FeedbackWho is Online

Most of the content on h2g2 is created by h2g2's Researchers, who are members of the public. The views expressed are theirs and unless specifically stated are not those of the BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of any external sites referenced. In the event that you consider anything on this page to be in breach of the site's House Rules, please click here. For any other comments, please click on the Feedback button above.


About the BBC | Help | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies Policy