Abstract
Naturally occurring tertiary rainbows are extraordinarily rare and only a handful of reliable sightings and photographs have been published. Indeed, tertiaries are sometimes assumed to be inherently in visible because of sun glare and strong forward scattering by raindrops. To analyze the natural tertiary’s visibility, we use Lorenz–Mie theory, the Debye series, and a modified geometrical optics model (including both interference and nonspherical drops) to calculate the tertiary’s (1) chromaticity gamuts, (2) luminance contrasts, and (3) color contrasts as seen against dark cloud backgrounds. Results from each model show that natural tertiaries are just visible for some unusual combinations of lighting conditions and raindrop size distributions.
© 2011 Optical Society of America
Full Article | PDF ArticleMore Like This
Michael Großmann, Elmar Schmidt, and Alexander Haußmann
Appl. Opt. 50(28) F134-F141 (2011)
Michael Theusner
Appl. Opt. 50(28) F129-F133 (2011)
Raymond L. Lee
Appl. Opt. 56(19) G42-G50 (2017)