cladking Posted February 14, 2013 Posted February 14, 2013 Tough question here. I believe an ancient source claims that under ideal conditions, mist and otherwise total darkness, that rainbows can be seen refracted from burning willow tree oil. The best I can determine this oil would provide a full stectum, but I have doubt it would be sufficiently bright to see a rainbow. The flame would have been about 20' from the mist probably. Am I wrong? Does anyone have any experience with this or know the equations? There is some chance it was a different type of oil but the only identifiable alternatives are olive oil or castor oil. The lamp had about a 2" diameter wick and probably small amounts of water with fuel flow.
cladking Posted February 14, 2013 Author Posted February 14, 2013 (edited) This is very informative on the subject. Thanks, but as near as I can tell this is just a primer on the nature of rainbows. I could have missed a section on rainbows generated by flames but skimmed it pretty closely. I assume by your linking this that you believe a rainbow would be visible because all the conditions are met? Do you have any experience with this? I consider a correct answer to be extremely important and lack the resources to duplicate the experiment. It's hardly life or death that the answer is correct but I need an unambiguous educated opinion because I don't trust my opinion on the subject (even though I could answer the questions posed). Edited February 15, 2013 by cladking
dimreepr Posted February 15, 2013 Posted February 15, 2013 I don’t have any direct experience but essentially all you need to create a rainbow is a light source and droplets of water. As for using flames, as a light source, it would depend on what you’re burning, I think the rainbow would skew towards the predominant wavelengths of the material being burnt. The lecture is worth a good look though, it goes into great depth and details all the conditions and types of rainbow, I have recognised aspects of, and different types of, rainbows which I mostly missed prior to watching.
Enthalpy Posted February 15, 2013 Posted February 15, 2013 Just make the experiment with a light bulb. Preferibly small and round, like a halogen lamp. Did I see rainbows made by car lamps? I believe so. Intuitively, our eyes have such a dynamic range that replacing the strong Sunlight by a less strong flame light is acceptable, provided the surroundings are dark enough. It can require to intercept as well all indirect light from the flame diffused by the surroundings.
cladking Posted February 19, 2013 Author Posted February 19, 2013 I don’t have any direct experience but essentially all you need to create a rainbow is a light source and droplets of water. As for using flames, as a light source, it would depend on what you’re burning, I think the rainbow would skew towards the predominant wavelengths of the material being burnt. The lecture is worth a good look though, it goes into great depth and details all the conditions and types of rainbow, I have recognised aspects of, and different types of, rainbows which I mostly missed prior to watching. Thanks again. Obviously with low light levels as from an oil lamp you'll need to worry about reflected light and I hadn't thought of this. It is very important that this be factored in. I suspect this oil was used because it burns pretty brightly. I believe one of these lamps was found in the Tomb of Sabu from 3200 BC and is misinterpreted as a "tri-lobed bowl". A lot of the information I need is exceedingly difficult to find on the net. Some might not really exist and would need to be duplicated.
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