Cloudbow
About Cloudbow
Cloudbows are like rainbows, but with much paler colours. In fact, they often don’t show any discernible colours at all – looking like albino rainbows, or the ghosts of rainbows past. They appear as the sunlight is reflected and refracted by the tiny droplets that make up low and mid-level clouds, rather than the much larger raindrops that produce rainbows.
In order to see a cloudbow, you have to be looking towards cloud droplets on to which the Sun is shining from behind your line of vision. These are the same conditions in which to see the multicoloured ring around your shadow, called a glory. So if you see glory, look for a cloudbow. Both effects are most often seen from aircraft as the sunlight casts a shadow of the plane down onto clouds below.
CloudSpotters wanting to add an albino rainbow to their collection without taking to the air, should seek fogbows. These are exactly the same, but appear in fog or mist.
The colours of cloudbows and fogbows are pale or absent because, at less than 0.1mm across, their cloud droplets diffract sunlight more efficiently than larger raindrops, causing the colours to overlap and blur into each other more than those of a rainbow
Image: Spotted over Mountainaire, Coconino County, Arizona, United States by CuBean.
Altitudes
Precipitation
Reference Images of Cloudbow
Don't Confuse Cloudbow With

Rainbow


