Rainbows in homogeneous and radially inhomogeneous spheres: connections with ray, wave and potential scattering theory
John A. Adam

TL;DR
This paper explores the deep mathematical and physical connections between ray, wave, and potential scattering theories in the context of rainbow phenomena in homogeneous and radially inhomogeneous spheres, highlighting new insights and future research directions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive framework linking rainbow scattering in spheres with potential theory, emphasizing the role of k-dependent potentials and resonant modes, and suggests extensions to inhomogeneous cases.
Findings
Rainbow phenomena relate to resonant modes and scattering poles.
Radially inhomogeneous spheres can exhibit zero-order bows.
Connections between ray, wave, and potential theories are elucidated.
Abstract
This chapter represents an attempt to summarize some of the direct and indirect connections that exist between ray theory, wave theory and potential scattering theory. Such connections have been noted in the past, and have been exploited to some degree, but in the opinion of this author, there is much more yet to be pursued in this regard. This article provides the framework for more detailed analysis in the future. In order to gain a better appreciation for a topic, it is frequently of value to examine it from as many complementary levels of description as possible, and that is the objective here. Drawing in part on the work of Nussenzveig, Lock, Debye and others, the mathematical nature of the rainbow is discussed from several perspectives. The primary bow is the lowest-order bow that can occur by scattering from a spherical drop with constant refractive index n, but zero-order (or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum optics and atomic interactions · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies · Quantum and Classical Electrodynamics
