It's what Noah would have wanted! 🕊️
A double rainbow happens when sunlight reflects twice inside raindrops, creating a second, fainter arc with reversed colors.
🌈 What causes a double rainbow?
A double rainbow forms through the same basic physics as a single rainbow — refraction, dispersion, and reflection of sunlight in raindrops — but with one key difference:
the light bounces twice inside each raindrop instead of once.
Here’s how it works:
- Primary rainbow:
Sunlight enters a raindrop, bends (refracts), reflects once inside, and exits. This produces the bright inner arc at about 40–42° from the antisolar point.
- Secondary rainbow:
Some sunlight undergoes two internal reflections before exiting the droplet. This extra bounce sends the light out at a wider angle — roughly 50–53° — creating a second arc outside the primary one.
Why are the colors reversed?
Because of the second internal reflection, the order of colors flips:
- Primary rainbow: red on the outside, violet on the inside
- Secondary rainbow: red on the inside, violet on the outside
This reversal is a direct result of the altered light path inside the droplet.
Why is the second rainbow fainter?
The secondary rainbow is dimmer because:
- Each internal reflection causes light loss, so less light reaches your eyes.
- Only a fraction of sunlight follows the double‑reflection path.
The secondary arc can be as little as one‑tenth the brightness of the primary.
What’s the dark band between the rainbows?
The space between the two arcs is called Alexander’s Dark Band.
Raindrops in this region do not direct light toward the observer, making the sky appear noticeably darker.
A double rainbow appears when:
- Sunlight refracts into raindrops
- Reflects twice inside the droplets
- Exits at a wider angle
- Produces a second, reversed, fainter arc
It’s a beautiful combination of geometry, optics, and atmospheric conditions — and one of nature’s most striking displays.
The thing is, if we know what questions to ask, we can in seconds have an answer neatly provided in whatever format and language we require. Perhaps we should ask AI if - " there is gold at the end of the AI rainbow?"

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