Abstract
WHILE walking out yesterday afternoon my attention was drawn to a very remarkable display of mares-tail clouds spreading from the north, stretching in broad and narrow bands in every direction over the whole sky, and reaching beyond the zenith. “While standing thus facing the sun, I saw, at a great elevation, a coloured bow with its convex red side towards the sun; it was only about one-sixth or one-seventh of a circle, and its width seemed to be only about half that of an average ordinary rainbow. It had the appearance of being nearly horizontal, with its centre not far from the zenith, but probably not so distant. Not being accustomed to estimate elevations, when I got home I took a quadrant and held it about the elevation of the part of the bow nearest the sun, and found it came out, on repeated trials, at a zenith distance of 25° or 26°.* When I first saw the bow it was just 6h. 30m. P.M. Greenwich time, and the sun appeared to be about 15° above the horizon (that you can correct by calculation). The sun was shining brightly, and the bow was projected over a patch of sky slightly dimmed, at a great height (but below the cirri?), by a smoke-grey haze; its ends just projected over the edges of the clouds. It lasted about 2m. and then faded away. There was no halo or ring but this. The wind was a rather fresh breeze, between S.S.E. and S.
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NORTON, H. Meteorological Phenomenon. Nature 12, 188 (1875). https://doi.org/10.1038/012188a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/012188a0
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