Circular rainbow? Do you live at extreme latitude?
All the rainbows I have ever seen were about 180 degree arcs (about half a circle). My home is at about latitude 40 degrees north, and I have seldom traveled further north than about 55 degrees, and never further south than about 40 degrees.
Many years ago I speculated about rainbows, which always seem to be cut off at the horizon.
I often wondered if rainbows might form a complete (or nearly complete) circle at more extreme latitudes. Say 80 or more degrees north/south.
Yesterday on a golf course, there was a sprinkler watering the fairway. As I approached it, I saw a rainbow about 10 feet in diameter (say 3 meters) which was about a 270 degree arc (about 3/4 of a circle). This made me think about the rainbow question again.
Does anybody know if a natural rainbow can be a complete circle? Do any of you live at an extreme latitude? If so, have you seen rainbows which are much more than half a circle?
But Hawaii's in the tropics
Hang about, everyone.
Guv's first question was about extreme latitude's but Martin's Google quote was about Hawaii, which is just inside the Northern tropics according to my map.
So Guv maybe it's not extreme latitudes but... but ... ***'s the opposite of extreme.... un-extreme ie tropical latitudes.
Saludos