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Create Your Own Rainbow

You usually have to wait until a storm has cleared and the sun comes out to see a rainbow, but you can make this rainbow inside your very own house. (Unfortunately, there won’t be a pot of gold at the end!)

Rainbow 3

 

 

 

 

 

 

What You Need

  • A shallow pan
  • Water
  • A flashlight or sunlight
  • A white surface or piece of paper
  • A mirror

    What to Do

    • Fill the shallow pan about half way full with water.
    • Place the mirror in the water at an angle.
    • Shine the light into the water where the mirror is under water (or, using the sunlight, bring the pan and mirror outside so the sun can shine on the mirror underwater)
    • Hold the white paper above the mirror; adjust the angle until you see the rainbow appear!
    Rainbow 1Rainbow 5

    What's Going On?

    Okay, so this doesn't look exactly like the rainbow you see in the sky after a storm, but it shares the same general characteristics of colors and order — but why? This demo and the rainbows that appear in the sky share the same principles: refraction & reflection.
    We’ve heard about refraction before — this is the concept of how light bends when it passes through different mediums, like glass or water. Refraction can even make arrows appear to reverse directions when viewed through a glass of water!
    When you shine the white light of your flashlight (or the white light coming from the sun) into the water, the light bends. But white light isn’t just one color; instead, it’s a combination of all the visible colors. So when white light bends, all of its components (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and indigo light) also bend. Each of these colors bends at a different angle because each color travels at a different speed inside water or glass.
    When you reflect the light back out of the water using the mirror, you’re reflecting the white light that has been broken up (from refraction) into the full rainbow of colors, and a rainbow appears!

    Apply It

    When a rainbow forms in the sky, the same principle applies. Many little water droplets refract the sun’s light. The angle at which we view these water droplets determines which color we see from them.

    Source:http://www.physicscentral.com/experiment/physicsathome/rainbow.cfm

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