The News (New Glasgow)

No bows from winter snows

- Cindy Day is Salt Wire Network’s Chief Meteorolog­ist.

Last week after the warm air was pushed out by a cold front, flurries started to fall in the colder air — that’s when Sherry Beaman spotted this lovely rainbow.

She was surprised to see it because it was snowing at the time. Sherry wants to know if there is such a thing as a “snow bow.”

Not all rainbows are created equal. The most common rainbow is a true rainbow created when sunlight reflects and refracts off water droplets. It’s fairly common but always nice to see.

Fog bows are also lurking out there. These are a little rarer — the light source has to be very low and behind you, plus the fog has to be just the right consistenc­y. Too much or too little of it and you won’t get one. Fog bows are also fainter than rainbows, sometimes appearing as a ghostly white.

Moonbows exist, too. If conditions are just right, rainbows can be produced by moonlight — which is, of course, sunlight.

But snowflakes just don’t cut it. Snowflakes are often aggregates or a collection of multiple snowflakes all clumped together as they fall from the sky. Light refracts off these in a more random way, and so the wavelength­s are not scattered out in an orderly fashion. Rainbows need spherical raindrops. Sunlight enters a drop, refraction changes the light’s direction, and it bounces off the sphere’s opposite side before leav- ing the drop.

There were flurries in the air when Sherry spotted her rainbow, but there also had to be some moisture in the air — that had not yet frozen.

 ??  ?? Sherry Beaman said the snow had just stopped when she spotted the faint rainbow. She wondered if it was indeed a snowbow?
Sherry Beaman said the snow had just stopped when she spotted the faint rainbow. She wondered if it was indeed a snowbow?
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