Hi everyone! We're hard at work trying to keep our community clean, so if you see any spam, please report it here and we'll review ASAP!  Thanks a million!
8,819 Users Online
  • 640,129,772 Downloads
  • 1,696,349 Wallpapers
  • 1,565,068 Members
  • 12,971,712 Votes
  • 5,965,287 Favorites

Photo Album

This is a Group for wallpapers that are actual photos, so if you are a camera buff, or a person who loves to post beautifully taken photographs, this is the group for you.

All are welcome.
Follow Group and Nexus guidelines for posting images and have fun!



WHAT TO SEND HERE: Images that are actual photographs. Photos may be touched up or added special touches made.

Group Information

Last Activity: 2 Weeks Ago
Group Leader: blueangels1015
Moderators: None
Submissions: Open
Group Visitors: 1,300,882
Founded: June 19th, 2017

Top Contributors

Recently Active Members

Recently Joined Members

Veronidae
howelandco
Pepper66
DaisyYonker
robert.blane
duduonline
AllTheSevens777

Fire Rainbow

Added by:
blueangels1015
on 4/30/18
4/29/18
3
181
Nature
Sky
1920x1200
5 Tags - Show

Wallpaper Description:

Photography on 4-27-2018

So what combination of clouds, moisture, and light come together to create these beautiful circumhorizontal arcs? How are they the same, and different, from the usual rainbows we see?

Basically, ice crystals in wispy, high-altitude cirrus clouds act like thousands of tiny prisms, similar to the role of raindrops in a normal rainbow. For a fire rainbow to appear, those hexagonal crystals need to be lined up perfectly and so does the sun, which must be very high in the sky (at least 58 degrees above the horizon). As sunlight streams through the cloud at the right angle, the crystals refract the light and create an array of colors.

The likelihood of seeing one of the arcs depends on where you live. Latitude is crucial; the further from the equator you are, the less time the sun is sufficiently high enough in the sky. In the US, the arcs may be seen five or more times each summer, according to the website Atmospheric Optics. The site also adamantly clarifies that the colorful arc “is not a rainbow and has nothing to do with fire.”

“There’s no real way of predicting these types of things, the same way we can’t predict rainbows,” says Roger Gass, a meteorologist with the NWS Bay Area office, who has never seen a fire rainbow himself. “It’s always worth looking up in the sky to see what’s there.”
Report This Wallpaper
This is Desktop Nexus Group, independently organized and operated by members of our community, focused around a specific theme or topic.   Find more groups!
1,368,624
Points
#73
Group Rank