Somewhere… over the (simulated) rainbow revisited…

A couple of months ago, I did some simple simulations of light refracting through raindrops in a hope to understand the details of precisely how rainbows form. The graphs I produced were kind of boring, but they did illustrate a few interesting features of rainbows: namely, the double rainbow, and the formation of Alexander’s band, the region of relatively dark sky between the two arcs.

But the pictures were kind of boring.

So, today I finally got the simulation working, did a trivial monte carlo simulation tossing fifty million rays or so, and then generated a picture by converting the spectral colors to sRGB. Et voila!

Horribly inefficient really, but satisfying result.

Addendum: In comparing the results to actual photographs of double rainbows, it seems like my pictures are scaled somewhat strangely (the distance between the arcs seems large compared to the radius). I suspect this is mostly due to the linear projection that I used and the very wide field (the field of view of the camera is nearly 100 degrees, which compresses the center and expands the outside. I’ll have to make some narrower field pictures tomorrow when my mind can handle the math, I’ve reached my limit tonight.

3 thoughts on “Somewhere… over the (simulated) rainbow revisited…

  1. Anonymous

    It’s a double rainbow all the way
    What does this mean? It’s so bright, so vivid
    Double rainbow, double rainbow, it’s so intense (tense)
    What does this mean? It’s startin’ to even look like a triple rainbow
    That’s a whole rainbow, ahahahah!
    Double rainbow all the way ‘cross the sky… yeah yeah

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