• 图片
  • 视频
  • 购物
  • 地图
  • 资讯
    • 视频
    • 购物
    • 翻译
    • 地图
    • 资讯
    • MSN
    • start.gg
    • 小游戏
    • Microsoft 365
      • Outlook
      • Word
      • Excel
      • PowerPoint
      • OneNote
      • Sway
      • OneDrive
      • 日历
      • 人脉
    • 了解必应
English
获取新版必应壁纸应用

Rainbow over Wasson Peak, Saguaro National Park, Arizona

© Frank Staub/Getty Images

The sky is the limit

每日一图

The sky is the limit

© Frank Staub/Getty Images
Have you ever spotted a rainbow and felt a little lucky? National Find a Rainbow Day, celebrated today, is all about looking to the sky for that magical mix of sun and rain. Nature's color wheel has long been linked to myths and legends, from Norse gods to the Irish leprechaun's pot of gold. But beyond folklore, the science behind rainbows is just as compelling. The first real explanation came from Theodoric of Freiberg, a German physicist, in 1304. He discovered that rainbows form when sunlight enters a raindrop, bends, reflects inside, and then bends again as it exits. This process splits light into its colors, creating the spectrum we see. The classic 'ROYGBIV' (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet) doesn't tell the whole story—rainbows contain millions of colors blended together.
了解更多
将必应设为你的主页

每天变美一点点

不错过任何瞬间,指尖一点,即可搜索。只需执行几个简单步骤,将必应设置为浏览器主页即可!
登录个人资料图片