'Fogbow': Photographer captures rare ‘Ghost Rainbow' over Derbyshire
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Andrew Butler took the picture of a fogbow, or white rainbow while out walking in Pinxton on a misty morning.
The ethereal apparition is a much less common sight than its rainy counterpart, the rainbow.
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Hide AdThey are caused by a similar physical phenomenon, from sunlight interacting with water droplets contained in fog, mist or cloud rather than interacting with raindrops as it does in a classical rainbow.
![Andrew captured the fogbow while out walking in Pinxton on a misty morning.](https://www.derbyshiretimes.co.uk/webimg/b25lY21zOjAxY2QyMjQwLTc5MDEtNDRlYy1hYzQ0LWRjZDI5OGY3MDFiZToxNjYwMGI1MS1iNDY5LTRmNWItYTZhYi1iZmIzNzlkZTA1Mzc=.jpg?crop=3:2,smart&width=640&quality=65)
![Andrew captured the fogbow while out walking in Pinxton on a misty morning.](/img/placeholder.png)
Andrew, of Pinxton, who took the image on his iPhone 12 Pro on Tuesday, said: “It seems they are quite rare so I was so pleased to see it appear for approx 10 minutes.”
Look for fogbows in a thin fog when the sun is bright. You might see one when the sun breaks through a fog. They are huge, almost as large as a rainbow and much, much broader.